EVIDENCE AND INNOVATION IN PRIMARY CARE 8th-10th July 2015 University of Oxford
44th Annual Conference of the Society for Academic Primary Care
PROGRAMME
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CONFERENCE COMMITTEE Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford
Dr Helen Ashdown
Dr Helen Atherton
Dr Daniel Lasserson
Miss Sarah Morrish
Professor Richard Hobbs
Professor Susan Jebb
Professor Richard McManus
Mr Dan Richards-Doran
Conference organisers Sue Stewart and Sharon Pidgeon, SAPC www.sapc.ac.uk Tel: 01865 331839
“Radcliffe Primary Care” The new building for the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences. Opens in November 2015.
WELCOME Welcome to the 44th Annual Conference of the Society for Academic Primary Care. It’s a real pleasure for the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences to be able to host this event and to welcome you to the University of Oxford. We hope that the science will stimulate your thinking and the surroundings inspire you at this lovely time of year. Please take a moment to have a look at our new building, in the Old Radcliffe hospital outpatients, next door to the conference centre on the Woodstock Road, which is just finishing its renovations before we move in this autumn. There has never been a more important time for academic primary care to showcase its contribution to the field and all that it can offer to improve health outcomes. Our theme this year, ‘Evidence and Innovation’ reflects firstly, the creativity that resides within the primary care community to identify solutions to the issues we see at first hand and secondly, the importance of good science to underpin decisions about investment in effective interventions. We hope that the programme will help you to feel at home at SAPC this year. We have three acclaimed keynote speakers; Simon Stevens setting out the opportunities for primary care as part of the 5 year forward view for the NHS; Rona MossMorris on the opportunities to use behavioural approaches to support patients with functionally unexplained syndromes and Bruce Guthrie reflecting on the challenge of managing multi-morbidity. We are honoured to be hosting the 2nd Helen Lester Memorial Lecture on Wednesday evening and delighted to welcome Carolyn Chew-Graham to give this public address. The remainder of the programme is filled with contributions from SAPC members and guests. We have received more submissions than ever before, demonstrating the continuing energy and investment in primary care research in the face of all the challenges facing our sector, and ensuring that we have a programme packed with interesting new data. We have 90 oral presentations, and we have included a further 112 of the shorter elevator pitches that worked so well last year. Back by popular demand are the ‘Dangerous Ideas’ and of course the SIGs which cut across a breadth of interests within the Society. We make no apologies for a packed scientific programme but we have tried to help you navigate your way through with clearly labelled sessions and colour coded abstracts to identify themes which may cut across sessions, such as international research, education, health services and policy or the applied research which is ‘ready-to-use’ in practice now. We all know how important the social programme is to the networking opportunities and overall experience of a meeting. On Wednesday evening we hope you will join us for drinks and canapés at the Natural History Museum where you can walk with dinosaurs. The conference dinner will be in the gothic splendour of Keble College. Whether or not you attend dinner, please join us afterwards in the bar for drinks and dancing. For those with inexhaustible supplies of energy, you may wish to join the run round the parks or a more gentle summer evening walk to the Botanical Gardens where you will be treated to a private tour led by the acting Director, with particular emphasis on the exotic plants used in medicine over the centuries. It has been my pleasure to Chair the organising committee this year and my thanks go to my colleagues in the department who have worked with me to plan the meeting with energy and enthusiasm. We owe a huge debt of gratitude to Sue Stewart for nurturing the SAPC annual meeting over many years and, together with Sharon Pidgeon, she has brought our plans to life. Thank you.
Professor of Diet and Population Health, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford
www.phc.ox.ac.uk | @OxPrimaryCare
CONTENTS
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Programme 5 Keynote speakers 16 Poster Programme 18 Mini-symposia 23 Workshops 25 Social programme and optional activities 26 Peer review 28 Conference information 29 Exhibitors and sponsors 30 Presenter index 31 Map
inside back cover
Venue plan
outside back cover
Abstracts can be found on the conference app and on the SAPC conference website.
Wednesday 8th July 2015 - All sessions take place in the Andrew Wiles Building
Morning
HODs / HOTs / Former HODs - see programme pages
10.30-12.00
SAPC pre-conference workshops - see programme pages
11.45-12.45
Special Interest Groups - see programme pages
12.00-13.00 LUNCH 13.00 -13.40 WELCOME AND OPENING SESSION Including presentations of distinction 13.50-15.20
Parallel session 1 Oral sessions, mini-symposium and workshop - see programme pages
15.20-15.45
TEA BREAK and poster discussion session 1
15.45-16.30
Plenary 1 - Simon Stevens, CEO NHS England
16.40-17.30
Elevator pitch session 1 - see programme pages
17.45-18.30
The 2nd Helen Lester Memorial Lecture Carolyn Chew-Graham, Keele University
18.30-20.00
Drinks reception for conference delegates Oxford University Museum of Natural History
19.30
Optional event: Skeptics in the Pub - see programme pages
Thursday 9th July 2015 - All sessions take place in the Andrew Wiles Building
08.00-08.55
Breakfast meeting Primary Healthcare Scientists (PHoCuS) group - Room L4
09.00-09.45
Plenary 2 - Rona Moss-Morris, Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London
09.45-10.45
Most Distinguished Papers from Australia and USA and Yvonne Carter Award
10.45-11.15
COFFEE BREAK - Primary healthcare scientists (PHoCuS) group gathering C1
11.15-12.45
Parallel session 2 Oral sessions, mini-symposium and workshop - see programme pages
12.45-14.15
LUNCH and poster discussion session 2
13.10-14.10
SAPC AGM - Room L2
14.15-15.45
Parallel session 3 Oral sessions, mini-symposium and workshop - see programme pages
15.45-16.15
TEA BREAK and poster discussion session 2
16.15-17.15
Elevator pitch session 2 including Dangerous Ideas - see programme pages
17.15/30
Optional activities - see programme pages
19.00-24.00 Conference Dinner - dress: lounge suits Keble College
Friday 10th July 2015 - All sessions take place in the Andrew Wiles Building
09.00-09.45
Plenary 3 - Bruce Guthrie, University of Dundee
10.00-11.00
Elevator pitch session 3 - see programme pages
11.00-11.30
COFFEE BREAK and poster discussion 3
11.30-12.30
Parallel session 4 Oral sessions, mini-symposium and workshop - see programme pages
12.35-13.00
CONFERENCE PRIZE GIVING SESSION
13.00
Packed lunch
13.30-15.00
Workshops and Special Interest Groups - see programme pages 5
6 P = Practice
I = International health
E = Education
S = Health services
Parallel session 1A Cancer Room: L1 Chair: Brendan Delaney
1A.1 Clinical features of metastatic cancer in primary care; a case-control study using medical records Willie Hamilton P
1A.2 Blood CEA levels for detecting recurrent colorectal cancer: a Cochrane Diagnostic Test Accuracy review Brian Nicholson
PARALLEL SESSIONS 1 13.50-15.20
13.50
14.05
1B.2 Feasibility of a randomized trial comparing different emollients for childhood eczema: findings from Choice of Moisturiser in Eczema Treatment (COMET) study Matthew Ridd
1B.1 Frequency and risk factors for hospital readmission of very preterm infants to age one year Buthaina Ibrahim
Parallel session 1B Child health Room: L2 Chair: Sonia Saxena
1C.2 The potential for alternatives to face to face consultations in UK Primary Care: thematic analysis of free text responses to a scoping survey Helen Atherton P S
1C.1 The tick and the talk: do patients’ survey responses relate to their narrated experience of primary care consultations? Jennifer Newbould P
Parallel session 1C Delivery of General Practice Room: L3 Chair: John Campbell
1D.2 Trends in long-term opioid prescribing in primary care patients with musculoskeletal conditions: an observational database study John Bedson
1D.1 The rise and fall of potentially inappropriate prescribing: trends and interaction with polypharmacy over 15 years in primary care in Ireland Frank Moriarty
Parallel session 1D Prescribing Room: L4 Chair: Jeremy Dale
Aim This symposium is designed to provide an account of a range of approaches, including traditional and newer metrics, to the assessment of the impact of published, peer-reviewed research. Attendees will learn about this and have the opportunity to discuss how the dissemination and uptake of research is likely to be measured in the future.
Parallel session 1E Mini-symposium 1- How can research impact be measured? Room: L5 Chair: Roger Jones
Aim and intended outcome / educational objectives Following a well-attended workshop at SAPC in 2011 on pilot and
Facilitators: Sandra Eldridge Queen Mary University of London Christine Bond University of Aberdeen Gillian Lancaster University of Lancaster Mike Campbell University of Sheffield
Parallel session 1F Workshop 1 - Understanding, reporting and conducting pilot and feasibility trials Room: L6
13.25 Plenary1.2 Randomised Controlled Trial Testing Physiotherapy-Led Exercise and Ultrasound-Guided Corticosteroid Injection for Subacromial Impingement Syndrome: The SUPPORT Trial Nadine Foster
13.10 Plenary1.1 Should antivirals be added to steroids in the treatment of severe, early Bell’s Palsy? Frank Sullivan
13.00-13.40 WELCOME AND OPENING SESSION Room: L1 Chairs: Richard Hobbs and Susan Jebb (video relay in L2) Presentations of distinction - selected from the highest scoring abstracts
12.00-13.00 LUNCH
11.45-12.45 Special Interest Groups Behaviour change Room: C4 Health Literacy Room: C2 Palliative care: “Where next for primary palliative care? A workshop with a blank canvas” Room: C3
10.30-12.00 SAPC pre-conference workshops 1: Becoming an independent researcher Room: L6 2: What to do when a journalist calls? Room: C1
08.30-11.45 HODs meeting part 2 Room: L4 08.30-11.45 HOTs meeting Room: L5 10.30-11.30 Old HODs Room: C2
TIME LOCATION
Key - The coloured spots within the programme correspond to the categories or topics opposite:
PROGRAMME: WEDNESDAY 8TH JULY 2015
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1A.5 The influence of first impressions on the diagnosis of early cancers by GPs Olga Kostopoulou
14.50
1A.6 Analysis of the Free Text Comments from the International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership 4 (ICBP4) Survey Rachel Parsonage
1B.6 The value of point-of-care CRP testing in acutely ill children presenting to out-of-hours services Ann Van den Bruel
1B.5 Prevalence of, and risk factors for, antimicrobial resistance in paediatric urinary bacteria - a systematic review and meta-analysis Ashley Bryce
S
1B.4 Patient reported GP access and out of hours emergency department visits in children. A national population based study Elizabeth Cecil
I
1B.3 Confidential enquiry into child deaths is associated with a reduction in child mortality in Africa Merlin Willcox
1C.6 Strategies to recruit and retain general practitioners: a systematic review Puja Verma S
1C.5 Evidence-based policy-making and the ‘art of commissioning’ how English healthcare commissioners access, use and transform information and academic research in ‘real life’ decision-making: An empirical qualitative study Lesley Wye S
1C.4 Assessing the public’s willingness to provide informed consent for their identifiable medical records to be accessed for different types of research Gemma Lasseter
1C.3 Patients’ reports and evaluations of patient safety in English general practices: a cross-sectional study Ignacio Ricci-Cabello P
1D.6 An investigation if the cost-effectiveness of medication monitoring in UK primary care: a case study of amiodarone Vladislav Berdunov
1D.5 Changes in adolescent poisonings in the UK over the past 20 years: a population based cohort study Edward Tyrrell
1D.4 Chinese herbal medicine for oligomenorrhoea and amenorrhoea in polycystic ovary syndrome: A randomised feasibility study in the United Kingdom Lily Lai
1D.3 Antibiotic prescribing and patient satisfaction in primary care: a cross-sectional analysis of national patient survey data and prescribing data in England Mark Ashworth
How the system works and what it offers to the healthcare research community. Jean Liu, product development manager at Altmetric
Experiences in assessing the impact of primary care research Paul Little, member of the HEFCE REF primary care panel
Speakers: “Traditional” measurement and outcomes of the journal impact factor for the BJGP and measures of activity on the journal’s website such as downloads and page views. Roger Jones, BJGP Editor and BJGP Web Editor Erika Niesner
w use participants’ pilot and feasibility trials to exemplify good practice in reporting, design and conduct
w present the CONSORT extension for pilot randomised trials, particularly focusing on where this differs from the main CONSORT statement
w introduce participants to an overarching conceptual framework for defining pilot and feasibility studies conducted in preparation for a randomised controlled trial of effectiveness
feasibility studies, we have been developing an extension to the CONSORT statement for pilot trials, and an overarching framework for defining these studies. In this workshop we aim to:
Elevator pitch session 1A Musculoskeletal Room: L1 Chair: Christian Mallen
EP1A.1 Optimising outcome prediction in primary care: Use of longitudinal data in prognosis research Gemma Mansell
ELEVATOR PITCH SESSIONS 1 16.40-17.30
16.40-17.30
EP1C.1 A qualitative exploration of the experience of living with epilepsy in the mid-west region of Ireland Breda Carroll
EP1B.1 Shared decision making in consultations when an option grid is introduced. Is the OG an artificial interruption in an otherwise artful consultation? A discourse analysis Katie Phillips P
Elevator pitch session 1C Long term conditions Room: L3 Chair: Andrew Wilson
Elevator pitch session 1B Consultation and communication Room: L2 Chair: Chris Salisbury
EP1D.1 What are medical students’ fears and concerns about communicating with patients? Crea Carberry
Elevator pitch session 1D Education Room: L4 Chair: Joe Rosenthal
E
EP1E.1 Identification of priority areas for adult vaccine safety: mixed methods analysis of patient safety incidents reports from Primary Care in England and Wales (2003-2013) Huw Prosser Evans
Elevator pitch session 1E Infection Room: L5 Chair: Jeremy Horwood
EP1F.1 “To have, to hold, from this day forward”: Research Nurses’ views regarding the retention of trial participants A Daykin
Elevator pitch session 1F Miscellaneous Room: L6 Chair: Jane Roberts
15.45-16.30 Plenary 1 Room L1 Chair: Richard Hobbs (video relay L2) Simon Stevens, CE NHS England The role of primary care in the NHS future plan
15.20-15.45 TEA BREAK and poster discussion session 1
15.05
1A.4 Evaluating the usefulness of longitudinal CEA measurements to detect colorectal cancer recurrence Bethany Shinkins
14.35
P
1A.3 A comparative qualitative study of patients’ experiences of cancer diagnosis in England, Denmark and Sweden John MacArtney
14.20
8
P
EP1B.7 Communication about heavy menstrual bleeding; is this the last taboo subject? Gail Prileszky
EP1B.6 Caring for the patient, caring for the record: an ethnographic study of ‘back office’ work in upholding quality of care in general practice Deborah Swinglehurst
EP1B.5 The iMpact on practice, oUtcomes and costs of New ROles for health care professionalS: results from the MUNROS study Christine Bond
EP1B.4 A mixed methods study examining the influence of general practice and nurse consultation characteristics on patient satisfaction and enablement Jane Desborough
P
EP1B.3 A Health Check for Rural General Practice in Scotland Sarah Mills P
EP1B.2 The potential for alternatives to face to face consultations in UK Primary Care: a realist review Helen Atherton P S
EP1C.7 Difficulty in accessing data from randomised trials of drug treatment in heart failure: a call for action Pieter MacKeith
EP1C.6 Atrial fibrillation screening in Irish general practice: a large scale feasibility trial Gerard Bury
EP1C.5 Have non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants made an impact in terms of stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation? An analysis of the UK cohort of the GARFIELD-AF registry Patricia Apenteng
EP1C.4 Mapping the Evolution of a Digital Health Programme towards Innovation in Primary Care: Living It Up Ruth Agbakoba
EP1C.3 The contribution of a process evaluation to explain the results of a cluster randomized controlled trial for people with depression in long-term physical conditions Peter Coventry
EP1C.2 Physical activity for the prevention and treatment of major chronic disease: An overview of systematic reviews David Nunan P
P = Practice
E
EP1D.7 What are the learning needs of medical students when addressing obesity in a primary care consultation and how might they be addressed? Kathleen Leedham-Green
E
EP1D.6 Evaluation of an on-line learning module to improve Prescribing in Primary Care E Richard Knox
EP1D.5 Retrospective Review of Prescriptions issued by GPs in Training - the initial stages of a pilot study Richard Knox
EP1D.4 The effect of the final year primary care attachment on medical students’ attitudes towards a career in GP E Sammy Mansour
EP1D.3 Developing an educational intervention for junior doctors at FY1/FY2 level working with patients with medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) Katherine Yon
S = Health services
EP1E.5 Are chlamydia related bacteria associated with miscarriage or preterm birth? Community-based prospective cohort study Pippa Oakeshott
EP1E.4 IMPACT-PC (Improved Management of Patients with Chlamydia and Gonorrhoea diagnosed in Primary Care Trial) - pilot feasibility study, Bristol 2015 Petra Manley
EP1E.3 A study of patients’ and GPs’ attitudes towards delayed antibiotic prescribing for suspected urinary tract infections Akke Vellinga P
EP1E.2 Low coverage of childhood vaccinations in London: What is the role of general practice factors? Manju Varshaa Gopalamurugan
E = Education
EP1D.2 The local context of the undergraduate GP placement- are we educating our students within deprived areas? The characteristics of one large network of teaching practices E Fiona Magee
I = International health
P
EP1F.7 Women’s experience of meaningful change following domestic abuse: a qualitative study nested in a trial of a specialist psychological advocacy intervention (the ‘PATH’ trial) Maggie Evans
EP1F.6 What should never happen in General Practice? A focus group study exploring the concept of Never Events in General Practice and enablers and barriers to their implementation in practice P Rebecca Morris
EP1F.5 Unscheduled Admissions for Suspected Seizures in the NHS in England 2007-2013 Jon Dickson
EP1F.3 “We’ve all been passed from pillar to post”: Patient experiences of living with Joint Hypermobility Syndrome Rohini Terry
EP1F.2 Complementary and Alternative Medicine use by participants in the PACE Trial George Lewith
18.30-20.00 Drinks reception - Oxford University Museum of Natural History Drinks and canapes with entertainment from In the Pink 19.30 Skeptics in the Pub - the AllTrials Campaign please sign up at the registration desk
17.45-18.30 THE 2ND HELEN LESTER MEMORIAL LECTURE Room: L1 Carolyn Chew-Graham (video relay in L2) Making a difference for people with mental health problems
EP1A.7 Modifying the STarT Back tool for use with patients with other musculoskeletal conditions: does it work? P Jonathan Hill
EP1A.6 Exploring shared decision-making in prescribing analgesia for musculoskeletal pain in primary care consultations Catherine Hyde
EP1A.5 Prevalence of CVDrelated comorbidity in ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis: A matched retrospective cohort study Nadeem Ahmed
EP1A.4 Supporting the SelfManagement of Low Back Pain in Primary Care: The Development of the ‘SupportBack’ Internet Intervention Rosie Stanford
EP1A.3 Temporal trend of annual consultation incidence of osteoarthritis between 1992 and 2013 in primary care in England: estimates from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink Dahai Yu
EP1A.2 Musculoskeletal (MSK) and Sport and Exercise Medicine (SEM) in General Practice (GP): A Novel GP-based clinic Neil Heron
Key - The coloured spots within the programme correspond to the categories or topics opposite:
PROGRAMME: WEDNESDAY 8TH JULY 2015 (CONTINUED)
2A.1 The ‘One in a Million’ study: Creating a database of primary care consultations and linked data Rebecca Barnes
2A.2 Rating communication in GP consultations: do patients and experienced trained raters agree? Gary Abel
11.15
11.30
P
Parallel session 2A Methodology Room: L1 Chair: Sarah Purdy
2B.2 Using home BP with the new JBS guidelines: estimation of CVD risk Richard Stevens
2B.1 “He’s overweight and smokes too much, but his blood pressure seems fine?!” - A systematic review of factors which predict masked hypertension in Primary Care James Sheppard
Parallel session 2B Hypertension Room: L2 Chair: David Fitzmaurice
P
P
P
2C.2 Computerised cognitive behaviour therapy (cCBT) as a treatment for depression in primary care (The REEACT trial): a large scale pragmatic randomised controlled trial Simon Gilbody
2C.1 The effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the Healthlines telehealth service for depression: randomised controlled trial Chris Salisbury
Parallel session 2C Mental health Room: L3 Chair: Carolyn Chew-Graham
2D.2 How parents and clinicians communicate about the ‘problem’ when children have an acute RTI Christie Cabral
2D.1 Investigating the effect of upper respiratory tract microbiology and antibiotic treatment on illness prognosis in children presenting to primary care with respiratory tract infection: results from the NIHR ‘TARGET’ Cohort Study Hannah Christensen
Parallel session 2D Respiratory tract infection Room: L4 Chair: Chris Butler
Speakers: Exploring the quality of life and well-being of men with prostate cancer and their partners and gaps in service provision: findings from a qualitative meta-synthesis. Carol Rivas and Richard Wagland, University of Southampton
Aim: to consider the main issues facing patients and their families in the survivorship phase of their journey, and to consider what role primary care could/should have in optimising care provision in the period following the end of initial treatment.
Parallel session 2E Mini-sympoisium 2 - Optimising prostate cancer survivorship care where does primary care fit in? Room: L5 Chair: Clare Wilkinson
COFFEE BREAK - Primary healthcare scientists group gathering over coffee in C1 - please pick up a coffee before joining the group
PARALLEL SESSIONS 2 11.15-12.45
10.45-11.15
Yvonne Carter Award for Outstanding Young Researcher 2015 Heart Failure: A Primary Care Problem Clare J Taylor, University of Birmingham Sophie Park, University College London was highly commended by the panel of judges representing RCGP and SAPC
09.45-10.45 NAPCRG/SAPC award winner from the North American Primary Care Group Annual Meeting 2014 Effectiveness of a quality improvement intervention on potentially inappropriate prescribing in older patients in primary care: a cluster randomised controlled trial (the OPTI-SCRIPT study) Barbara Clyne, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland Most distinguished paper from the Primary Health Care Research Conference 2014 (Australia) Family-centered brief intervention for improving physical activity, nutrition and reducing cardiovascular disease risk in family medicine patients: a randomised trial Felicity Goodyear-Smith, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Educational objectives / Intended outcome: w Improved understanding of the importance of research context and the marked heterogeneity of effect between sites in most LMIC quality improvement initiatives
Aims: w To discuss research on quality improvement in PHC in Low and Middle income Countries w To discuss how to develop and promote trial methodologies which take better account of research context in LMICs, providing evidence about what will work where.
Parallel session 2F Mini-sympoisium 3 - Quality improvement in Primary Health Care in Low and Middle Income Countries - research outcomes
09.00-09.45 Plenary 2 Room L1 Chair: Christian Mallen (video relay in L2) Rona Moss-Morris, Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London Supporting people with medically unexplained symptoms
08.00-08.55 PHoCuS group meeting (Primary Healthcare Scientists) Room: L4 Chairs: Christine Bond and Sandra Eldridge
TIME LOCATION
PROGRAMME: THURSDAY 9TH JULY 2015
9
10
2A.4 Implementation of the TRANSFoRm evidence service supporting diagnosis in primary care Derek Corrigan
2A.5 An approach to developing successful trial follow-up procedures Caroline Free
2A.6 Constructive explanations: a taxonomy of explanation components for medically ‘unexplained’ symptoms LaKrista Morton
12.00
12.15
12.30
P
2C.6 Changes in antidepressant prescribing for patients with depression in English primary care 2003-2013: time trend analyses of effects of the NICE depression guidelines, and the GP contract quality and outcomes framework (QOF) Tony Kendrick
2C.5 Exploration of the utility of co-morbid depression as a prognostic marker in patients with heart failure: Findings from a community cohort in the United States Bhautesh Jani I
2C.4 Long-term effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of cognitive behavioural therapy as an adjunct to pharmacotherapy for treatment resistant depression in primary care: follow-up of the CoBalT trial Nicola Wiles
2C.3 Mental health interventions and future major depression among primary care patients with subthreshold depression Sandra Davidson
14.15
P
2D.6 A PRImary care randomised trial of an internet intervention to Modify Influenza-like illness and respiratory infection Transmission (PRIMIT trial.) Paul Little
P
2D.5 Oral Steroids for Acute Cough (OSAC): a multi-centre, placebo controlled, randomised trial Alastair Hay
2D.4 “It’s safer to ...” Safety for parents consulting and clinicians prescribing antibiotics for children with respiratory tract infections: an analysis across four linked qualitative studies P Christie Cabral
S = Health services
Discussion will be held after the presentations.
A system re-design project facilitating the safe discharge of stable survivors to primary care. Key elements: (1) an automated PSA surveillance system linking secondary and primary care; (2) person-centred holistic needs assessment and patient-held care plan review; (3) a nurse-led out-ofhospital individualised intervention (TOPCAT-P pilot trial). Andrei Stanciu, Bangor University: Prostate Cancer Follow-up in North Wales
The role of primary care in prostate cancer follow-up: findings from PROSPECTIV - a pilot trial of a nurse-led psycho-educational intervention delivered in primary care Eila Watson, Oxford Brookes University
E = Education
2D.3 Factors influencing the clinician’s ‘gut feeling that something is wrong’ and the subsequent relationship with their treatment behaviour for children presenting to primary care with cough and RTI P Sophie Turnbull
I = International health
Merlin Willcox: In what conditions do death reviews lead to reductions in maternal and child mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa?
David Mant: Demand-led financing to reduce maternal mortality in Mozambique - is it the right context?
Speakers: Claire Blacklock: Impact of contextual factors on the effect of interventions to improve health worker performance in sub-Saharan Africa: review of randomised clinical trials
w Agreement on joint working to develop a funding application to support further work in this area
3A.1 Informing the design of a national screening and treatment programme for chronic viral hepatitis in primary care: Qualitative study of at-risk immigrant communities and healthcare professionals Lorna Sweeney
3B.1 Is case management of ‘at-risk’ patients in primary care effective? A systematic review and meta-analysis Jonathan Stokes P
3C.1 Cost-effectiveness of a telehealth intervention to reduce CVD risk: Lifetime simulation modelling using QRISK2 Padraig Dixon
3D.1 How common are giant cell arteritis symptoms in patients with polymyalgia rheumatica?: results from an incident primary care cohort Christian Mallen
Aim and intended outcome The aim is to increase understanding among participants of strategies to successfully translate researchevaluated complex interventions into routine organisation and
Room: L5
(mis)translating organisational interventions from research to practice: experience from three large trials of complex interventions to improve primary care prescribing safety
Parallel session 3E Mini-symposium 4 - Successfully
Facilitators: Martin Ashton-Key, NIHR Evaluation Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre (NETSCC) Kate Dowson, NETSCC
Parallel session 3F Workshop 3 - Enhancing your career through working with the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Room: L6
SAPC making a difference featuring the AGM Room: L2
2B.6 The inter-arm difference in blood pressure and mortality: systematic review and meta-analysis Christopher Clark
2B.5 All in the timing? Patients and clinicians views on the optimum schedules for self-monitoring of blood pressure Sabrina Grant
2B.4 Variability in blood pressure: true effect or much ado about nothing? A systematic review and meta-analysis of the influence of blood pressure mean and variability on outcomes Sarah Stevens
2B.3 Accuracy of self-monitored blood pressure for diagnosing hypertension in primary care David Nunan
P = Practice
PARALLEL Parallel session 3A Parallel session 3B Parallel session 3C Parallel session 3D SESSIONS 3 Infectious diseases Health services Cardiovascular disease Musculoskeletal 14.15-15.45 Room: L1 Room: L2 Room: L3 Room: L4 Chair: Paul Little Chair: Trish Greenhalgh Chair: Mark Ashworth Chair: Elaine Hay
13.10-14.10
12.45-14.15 LUNCH and poster discussion
2A.3 Is a pilot study useful to determine the size of a cluster randomised trial? Sally Kerry
11.45
Key - The coloured spots within the programme correspond to the categories or topics opposite:
PROGRAMME: THURSDAY 9TH JULY 2015 (CONTINUED)
11
3A.4 Which women treated first symptomatically for a urinary tract infection (UTI) are later prescribed an antibiotic? Ildiko Gagyor P
3A.5 The Point Of carE testing for urinary Tract Infection in primary Care (POETIC) study: A randomised controlled trial of the clinical and cost effectiveness of Flexicult point of care urine culture Tim Pickles
3A.6 HPV vaccination- what impact on cervical cancer can we expect? Claire Rees
15.00
15.15
15.30
ELEVATOR PITCH SESSIONS 2 16.15-17.15
S
S
3B.6 The use of linked health and mortality data to inform injury prevention strategies Ruth Baker
3B.5 How could a Patient-Reported Outcome Measure (PROM) for Long-term Conditions (LTCs) improve Patient Care? Patients’ and Health and Social Care Stakeholders’ Perspectives Caroline Potter
3B.4 Investigating the relationship between quality of primary care and premature mortality in England: a spatial whole-population study Evangelos Kontopantelis
3B.3 Primary care and demand on Emergency Departments: understanding the role of access through an ethnographic study of GP practices Fiona MacKichan
3B.2 Access to general practice and the route of emergency admission to hospital: retrospective analysis of national hospital administrative data Thomas Cowling
Elevator pitch session 2B Prescribing Room: L5 Chair: Tony Avery
EP2B.01 Variation between practices in high-risk prescribing: multilevel modelling study of six indicators over five years in 190 practices Bruce Guthrie
EP2A.01 Bisphosphonates and risk of stroke: self controlled case series study Zahid Asghar
P
EP2C.01 Adverse outcomes in older adults attending emergency department: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the Identification of Seniors At Risk (ISAR) screening tool Yannick Gilleit
Part 4: Interactive component Audience narratives
EP2D.01 Age-related smoking status in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) stratified by severity of airflow obstruction: an observational cohort study using the Hampshire Health Record Analytical database (HHRA) Lynn Josephs
The workshop will provide an overview of the NIHR and highlight opportunities for professional development, research funding opportunities and improving patient care through engagement with the organisation. The intended outcome for participants is that they understand how working with the NIHR can benefit both clinicians and patients and can apply this directly to their current role.
Aim and intended outcome: We are proposing to run a workshop for GPs at all career stages wishing to develop their professional skills and research interests.
Should doctors diagnose poverty? Andrew Moscrop
We should embrace and use self-disclosure Bruce Arroll
Dangerous ideas Room: L2 Chair: Bob McKinley
Part 3: An honest account of translational strategies and what has actually got implemented so far including how NHS implementation differs from the interventions trialled Tony Avery and Bruce Guthrie
Part 2: Brief summary of the three prescribing interventions trialled and their effectiveness Tony Avery, Bruce Guthrie and Tobias Dreischulte
Part 1: What does the literature tell us about strategies to promote successful translation? A brief review of barriers and facilitators of translation into policy and practice, and strategies to maximise translation Bruce Guthrie
practice, including understanding of strategies which increase the likelihood of translation and discussion of the range of outcomes which count as ‘success’.
Elevator pitch session 2D Respiratory Room: L4 Chair: Mike Thomas
3D.6 Developing a theory-informed intervention using primary care clinicians’ perceptions of stratified care for musculoskeletal conditions Ben Saunders
3D.5 Primary care based sepsis aftercare improves musculoskeletal function Konrad Schmidt
3D.4 Evaluating the impact of using an Option Grid for osteoarthritis of the knee in an interface musculoskeletal clinic: a stepped wedge trial Tim Pickles
3D.3 Evaluating the use of an Option Grid® for knee osteoarthritis for patients who are from a socially disadvantaged population. Qualitative interviews from a stepped wedge implementation trial (TOGA Study) Fiona Wood
3D.2 On a learning curve: Interviews with clinicians using Option Grids® to facilitate SDM with patients with osteoarthritis of the knee Fiona Wood
Elevator pitch session 2C Older adults/elderly and mental health Room: L3 Chair: Tony Kendrick
3C.6 Patient Experiences of the Clinical Pathway for Diagnosing Heart Failure in Primary Care Clare J Taylor
3C.5 The effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of telehealth for reducing cardiovascular risk in patients at high risk: randomised controlled trial Chris Salisbury
3C.4 Performance of cardiovascular risk scores in South Asian populations - a systematic review of the literature Dipesh Gopal
3C.3 The txt4healthyhearts mobile phone based intervention to reduce LDL cholesterol in patients at high risk of a cardiovascular event: intervention development Caroline Free
3C.2 The impact of provision of a cardiovascular disease risk estimate to practitioners or patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis Juliet Usher-Smith
Elevator pitch session 2A Cardiovascular disease Room: L1 Chair: Richard McManus
15.45-16.15 TEA BREAK and poster discussion session 2
3A.3 Diagnosing serious infections in acutely ill children in ambulatory care: diagnostic accuracy of a clinical decision tree together with a point-ofcare C-reactive protein test Jan Verbakel
P
3A.2 Oral corticosteroids for symptom relief of sore throat: a doubleblind randomised placebo controlled trial in UK primary care Gail Hayward
14.45
14.30
12 S
EP2B.10 Evaluating an international webbased intervention to change GP prescribing: a triangulation of mixed methods data Sarah Tonkin-Crine
EP2B.09 Variation in Anticoagulation treatment Between CCGs: Are Demographic Factors to Blame? Emma Byrne
EP2B.08 Lessons on the failure of the “Better Care Better Value” prescribing indicator for renin-angiotensin system drugs in treating hypertension: a qualitative study from general practitioners’ perspectives Amanj Baker
EP2B.07 Thiazolidinedione drugs and the risk of cancer in patients with diabetes: nested casecontrol studies using a primary care database Carol Coupland
EP2B.06 Interventions for improving medication reconciliation across transitions of care - a systematic review Patrick Redmond
EP2B.05 General Practitioners’ antibiotic prescribing decisions for children with upper respiratory tract infection: a Think-Aloud study Nicola McCleary P
EP2B.04 Prevalence of pre-existing diabetes mellitus in pregnancy and associated prescribing patterns using electronic health records Sonia Coton
EP2B.03 Addressing inequalities in the provision of pharmaceutical services in Scotland: a proof of concept study of telepharmacy in rural Scotland Christine Bond
EP2B.02 What to give the patient who has everything? Development of an intervention to improve prescribing in multimorbidity Carol Sinnott P
EP2C.10 Treatment outcomes in schizophrenia: what people with schizophrenia consider to be important outcomes Helen Lloyd
EP2C.09 How do GPs deal with parents bereaved by suicide? A qualitative study Carolyn Chew-Graham P
EP2C.08 Depression and chronic physical disease: a Q-methodology study of patients with co-morbidity Sarah Alderson
EP2C.07 Multimorbidity and the risk of depression in different ethnic groups Chandra Sarkar
EP2C.06 The role of social relationships in persistent or recurrent depression among primary care patients Sandra Davidson
EP2C.05 The 3D Study: Improving the management of patients with multimorbidity in general practice. Initial observations from the pilot study Katherine Chaplin
EP2C.04 Socio-demographic and lifestyle determinants of multimorbidity in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) Jose Valderas
EP2C.03 Making Sense Of Dementia Risk And Its Prevention - A Qualitative Process Evaluation Of The In-Mindd Trial P Susan Browne
E = Education
S
P
Health research should be crowd-funded through Kickstarter Sarah Knowles
GP-Uberification: the next generation consultation Oliver van Hecke
Over the counter antibiotics: Letting the genie safely out of the (urine) bottle Kyle Knox
From 19.00 Conference dinner at Keble College to midnight From 19.00 - pre-dinner drinks will be served in the Quad. 20.00 - dinner will be served. Dancing til 23.00. The bar will be open until midnight A limited number of extra tickets can be purchased at the registration desk @£55 each
Sign up for these activities in advance at the registration desk - places are limited for the botanic garden tour
EP2D.09 Enabling patient-centred care in advanced COPD: identifying care and support needs Morag Farquhar
EP2D.08 Feasibility and acceptability of conducting a trial of a C-reactive protein point of care test assisted management strategy for patients presenting with acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in UK primary care David Gillespie
EP2D.07 A partnership approach to COPD diagnosis and management in general practice Sarah Dennis
EP2D.06 Over diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in the UKcross sectional analysis of baseline data from Birmingham COPD cohort study Halima Buni
EP2D.05 What are the barriers and facilitators to clinicians’ ability to meet the needs of patients with advanced COPD and their informal carers? Caroline Moore
EP2D.04 Oral propranolol in people with asthma and anxiety P DR Morales
EP2D.03 COPD readmissions in an urban environment: health service factors Patrick White
even day working in primary care will increase health inequalities and should be resisted John Ford
S = Health services
EP2D.02 Preferences for care and treatment in advanced Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) patients: results from a discrete choice experiment Morag Farquhar P
I = International health
EP2C.02 Fracture in the Elderly Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation (FEMuR): results of a phase II randomised feasibility study of a multidisciplinary rehabilitation package following proximal hip fracture Nefyn Williams
P = Practice
17.15 Optional activity - University of Oxford botanic garden tour - meet at the conference registration desk, Andrew Wiles Building 17.30 Optional activity - Run around scenic Oxford - meet at Keble College Porter’s Lodge
EP2A.10 Allied health professional-led interventions for improving control of blood pressure in patients with hypertension: A Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis Christopher Clark
EP2A.09 Bisphosphonates and risk of stroke: matched case-control study Ana Godoy Caballero
EP2A.08 Changes in blood pressure in patients with hypertension receiving usual care in randomised controlled trials: findings from a systematic review and meta-analysis Christopher Clark
EP2A.07 Indirect blood pressure measurement for the diagnosis of hypertension in obese patients: A diagnostic accuracy review Greg Irving
EP2A.06 Rethinking cardiovascular screening: an observational study of workplace wellness kiosks Susannah Fleming
EP2A.05 The prognostic value of B-type natriuretic peptides in chronic heart failure patients - A primary care perspective Milena Kurtinecz
EP2A.04 Hazards of cold spells for incidence of cardiovascular disease in older British men Richard Morris
EP2A.03 Temporal trends in stroke incidence in young people: a systematic review of population based studies Catherine Scott
EP2A.02 How should patients monitor their own blood pressure: a systematic review James Hodgkinson
Key - The coloured spots within the programme correspond to the categories or topics opposite:
PROGRAMME: THURSDAY 9TH JULY 2015 (CONTINUED)
ELEVATOR PITCH SESSIONS 3 10.00-11.00
EP3B.08 Acceptability, reliability and validity of the “Patient Reported Experiences and Outcomes of Patient Safety in Primary Care” (PREOS-PC) instrument Ignacio Ricci-Cabello
EP3A.07 Making ‘Social prescribing’ work: The Links Worker Programme in ‘Deep End’ practices in Glasgow Nai Rui Chng
EP3A.08 Gender inequalities in social support and access to healthcare for cardiovascular risk prevention in the Pakistani community, UK: a qualitative study Farina Kokab
P
EP3B.06 The use of verbal and written consent to review primary care medical records in a randomised controlled trial: Evaluation of a two-stage process Emily Fletcher
EP3B.05 Research impact in the community based health sciences: an analysis of 162 impact case studies submitted to the 2014 Research Excellence Framework (REF) Trisha Greenhalgh
EP3B.04 Risk prediction models for colorectal neoplasia or cancer in symptomatic individuals: a systematic review Thomas Williams
EP3B.03 Internet delivery of a multi-centre randomised controlled trial in general practice Paul Wallace
P
EP3B.07 Encouraging collaborations between researchers and commissioners: a qualitative evaluation of a knowledge mobilisation initiative S Lesley Wye
EP3A.06 Left, Right, Left, Does it Matter which Arm? Ethnic Variations in Clinical Interarm Difference and Relationship to White Coat Effects Claire Schwartz
EP3A.05 Mortality rates amongst patients on opiate substitution treatment - comparing those on methadone or buprenorphine medications Colin Steer P
EP3A.04 How do White British and Pakistani people rate communication within simulated GP-patient consultations? A national experimental vignette study Jenni Burt
EP3A.03 What do we know about the involvement of minority ethnic groups in health and social care research? A systematic review Shoba Dawson
EP3B.02 Does patient and public involvement have an impact on general practice? A participatory action research study Jess Drinkwater
EP3B.01 Quantifying the value of aspects of personalised care: development of a Discrete Choice Experiment around support for self-management of chronic pain Christopher Burton
EP3A.01 Improving access to primary care for deprived older people living in rural areas: a mixed method study John Ford S
EP3A.02 Digital health interventions for people with low health literacy: An international trial of web-based materials to promote physical activity amongst people with type-2 diabetes Ingrid Muller
Elevator pitch session 3B Methodology Room: L2 Chair: Kerry Hood
Elevator pitch session 3A Vulnerable groups Room: L1 Chair: Mike Moore
EP3C.09 A qualitative study exploring barriers and facilitators to presenting to primary care among smokers Julie Walabyeki
EP3C.08 A longitudinal study of smoking cessation among primary care patients with depressive symptoms Sandra Davidson
EP3C.07 Development of the Smoking Treatment Optimisation in Pharmacies (STOP) Intervention: Integration of four elements Liz Steed
EP3C.06 The impact of the 2012 QOF revision on the provision of smoking cessation support in UK primary care Paul Aveyard
EP3C.05 Motivational interviewing for smoking cessation: an update Nicola Lindson-Hawley
I
EP3D.10 Relating Prescribing to Use of Unscheduled Care for Pain-Related Presentations in Patients with Cancer in their Last 12 Months of Life P Sarah Mills
EP3D.09 Association between use of the urgent cancer referral pathway and cancer survival: national cohort study Thomas Round
EP3D.08 Circulating vitamin D concentrations and breast cancer risk: A pooled analysis of 17 cohorts Toqir Mukhtar
EP3D.07 A randomised controlled trial of the detection in blood of autoantibodies to tumour antigens as a casefinding method in lung cancer using the EarlyCDT-Lung test in Scotland (ECLS) Frank Sullivan
EP3D.05 Detecting recurrence of colorectal cancer following five years of scheduled CEA and CT - An economics analysis from the Follow-up after Colorectal Surgery (FACS) Randomized Clinical Trial Yaling Yang
EP3D.04 Pre-diabetes: Should we screen for it and if so, how and what should we offer to those who screen positive? Eleanor Barry
EP3C.03 Access to adult weight management in primary care: qualitative interviews with key stakeholders from NHS weight management services in Scotland David Blane EP3C.04 Healthcare professionals’ experiences of supporting participants using an online weight management intervention (POWeR): A qualitative study Emily Smith
EP3D.03 Liver Function Testing (LFT) in Primary Care: Retrospective Case Note Review of the Management of Patients with Abnormal LFTs Christopher Weatherburn P
EP3D.01 Differential diagnosis generators in UK primary medical care: A feasibility study using the Isabel diagnostic tool Rahul Alam
Elevator pitch session 3D Diagnosis and cancer Room: L4 Chair: Willie Hamilton
EP3C.02 A feasibility study of ‘Simple Steps’ - a general practice based physical activity intervention in pregnancy Neil Heron
EP3C.01 Evaluating implementation fidelity in the PACE-UP (Pedometer and Consultation Evaluation-UP) complex walking intervention Emma Howard
Elevator pitch session 3C Weight management Room: L3 Chair: Susan Jebb
09.00-09.45 Plenary 3 Room L1 Chair: Susan Jebb (video relay in L2) Bruce Guthrie, University of Dundee Multimorbidity: new paradigm or the emperor’s new clothes?
TIME LOCATION
PROGRAMME: FRIDAY 10TH JULY 2015
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14 4C.4 Diagnosis of dementia using the mini-mental state examination in general practice and the community: Cochrane systematic review of diagnostic test accuracy Sam Creavin P
4B.4 The EXPERT study: feasibility randomised controlled trial of an internet-based intervention using patient experience to support selfmanagement of asthma John Powell P
4A.4 Can community healthcare practitioners believe point-of-care tests for haemoglobin and renal function? Agreement study of pointof-care tests and subsequent central laboratory tests for acute frailty syndromes in older adults Jan Verbakel
12.15
4C.3 Awareness and information needs relating to Assistive Technologies among people with dementia, carers and General Practitioners; A qualitative study Lisa Newton
4B.3 The association between emergency admissions for asthma and access to English primary care; national database cross sectional analysis Robert Fleetcroft
4A.3 Urgent need for alternative sampling strategies for electrolytes in primary care: relationship between potassium in primary care samples and ambient temperature on day of collection in a population of 600,000 registered patients Dan Lasserson P
12.00
4C.2 Cast Adrift in the Care System?A Systematic Scoping Review of Care Navigation for Older People with Multimorbidity Jolien Vos P
4B.2 Patient experience of using a digital health application for selfmanagement support in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Veronika Williams
P
4C.1 REDIRECT: An analysis of the nature and drivers of avoidable emergency department presentations by the elderly in metropolitan Melbourne, Australia I Danielle Mazza
4A.2 Glucose, blood pressure and cholesterol levels and their relationships to clinical outcomes in type 2 diabetes: a retrospective cohort study David Springate
4A.1 The language of chronic kidney disease diagnosis: a qualitative study of patient experiences and primary care professionals’ views Jeremy Horwood
11.30
Parallel session 4C Elderly care and dementia Room: L3 Chair: Christine Bond
P = Practice
11.45
4B.1 TargetCOPD: A pragmatic randomised controlled trial of targeted case finding for COPD versus routine practice in primary care Rachel Jordan P
Parallel session 4B Respiratory Room: L2 Chair: Alastair Hay
Parallel session 4A Metabolic disease Room: L1 Chair: Helen Stokes-Lampard
PARALLEL SESSIONS 4 11.30-12.30
11.00-11.30 COFFEE BREAK and poster discussion 3
Key - The coloured spots within the programme correspond to the categories or topics opposite:
P
P
4D.4 How can we promote effective engagement with web-based support for weight management? Lucy Yardley
4D.3 Psychological advocacy towards healing (PATH): A parallel group individually randomised controlled trial of a psychological intervention for survivors of domestic violence and abuse Jayne Bailey
4D.2 What influences women’s preferences for differing medical treatments for heavy menstrual bleeding? Gail Prileszky
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A generalizable model of diagnostic knowledge. How to make evidence available in a computable format, and to curate and maintain high quality evidence. Derek Corrigan, Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland.
Experimental evidence to support diagnostic decision support arising from a recent RCT of simulated cases, showing a 6% absolute improvement in diagnostic accuracy with ‘suggestions’ based on the presenting problem. Impact on diagnostic accuracy of a full evaluation of the DSS in a controlled before-after study with GPs, using actors as simulated patients. Olga Kostopoulou, King’s College London.
Facilitators T Greenhalgh, University of Oxford C Jackson, University of Queensland, Australia J Smith, Director of Policy, The Nuffield Trust, London
Speakers The problem of diagnostic error, and why it is difficult to move to evidence-based diagnosis. Terminologies, classifications and types of evidence. What a LHS is and how it could solve the problem of collecting diagnostic evidence. Brendan Delaney, King’s College London.
To involve workshop participants in applying the principles of cocreation to their current research programmes.
To share successful ‘research into practice’ initiatives involving chronic disease management and quality improvement, utilising the co-creation approach.
Aims and Objectives: To introduce the co-creation approach, linking researchers and end-users in embedding research into practice.
Parallel session 4F Workshop 4 - Co-creation of knowledge in primary care: researchers really can change the world - if they embrace new paradigms! Room: L6
S = Health services
Parallel session 4E Mini-symposium 5 - Implementing a Learning Health System for diagnosis in Primary Care Room: L5
E = Education
4D.1 Effects of a mobile phonebased intervention to support post-abortion family planning in Cambodia Chris Smith
Parallel session 4D Women’s health Room: L4 Chair: Pippa Oakeshott
I = International health
PROGRAMME: FRIDAY 10TH JULY 2015 (CONTINUED)
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The learning objectives of this workshop are: (i) to gain a better understanding of what PROMs are (and what they are not); (ii) to be able to complete, administer score and interpret different types of PROMs; (iii) to be able to identify and appraise PROMs for use in Primary Care; (iv) to know best practice and the supporting evidence for their use in Primary Care; and (v) to learn from hands on ongoing experience of routinely using PROMS to patients with multiple conditions in GP surgeries in the South West.
Skin/dermatology - please note this SIG has been cancelled
Personal care - Room: C1 Genetics - Room: C2 Education research - Room: C3 PHoCuS group champions - Room: C4
Special Interest Groups
See you at the next SAPC annual conference in Dublin 6-8 July 2016
Objectives 1. Shared understanding of the barriers and facilitators to implementing a robust curriculum focused on compassionate care 2. Shared understanding of the benefits of delivering a comprehensive curriculum focused around compassionate care 3. Collaboration for educational research focused on education of compassion in the primary care curriculum
Aim and Objectives Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) are health status assessments elicited from the patients themselves. The new NHS Outcomes Framework places PROMs among the key measures of performance of the National Health Services., but there has so far been limited evidence on their use in Primary Care.
Facilitators: Jose Valderas, University of Exeter Medical School Ian Porter, University of Exeter Medical School
Facilitators: Richard Knox, University of Nottingham Rodger Charlton, University of Nottingham Jane Coomber, University of Nottingham
Aim To explore ways of meaningfully delivering a curriculum of compassionate care in primary care to our undergraduate medical students and postgraduate trainees.
Workshop 6 Using PROMs in Primary Care in theory and practice Room: L5
Workshop 5 Educating for compassion in primary care Room: L4
13.30-15.00 Workshops and Special Interest Groups
13.00 Packed lunch
SAPC ASM 2016 presentation - Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin
Prize giving
12.35-13.00 Closing Session Room L1 Chair: Richard Hobbs
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS Wednesday 8th July 15.45 - 16.30
Simon Stevens CEO NHS England
The role of primary care in the NHS future plan Simon Stevens became CEO of NHS England on 1 April 2014. He has previously spent fifteen years working in the NHS and UK public service, and eleven years internationally. He joins NHS England from UnitedHealth Group, where as president of its global health division he has led health services in the United States, Europe, Brazil, India, China, Africa, and the Middle East. Previously he was the organisation’s Medicare CEO, commissioning publiclyfunded health care for millions of older Americans. From 1997 to 2004 Simon was the Prime Minister’s Health Adviser at 10 Downing Street, and policy adviser to successive Health Secretaries at the UK Department of Health. Prior to that he held a number of senior NHS roles in the North East, London and the South Coast - leading acute hospitals, mental health and community services, primary care and health commissioning. Simon joined the NHS through its Graduate Training Scheme in 1988. Simon currently volunteers as a member of the board of directors of the Commonwealth Fund, an international health philanthropy. He has previously also served as a trustee of the Kings Fund and a director of the Nuffield Trust, as well as a local councillor for Brixton and a visiting professor at the London School of Economics.
17.45 - 18.30 The 2nd Helen Lester Memorial Lecture.
Professor Carolyn Chew-Graham Keele University
Making a difference for people with mental health problems Carolyn Chew-Graham is a GP Principal in Central Manchester, Professor of General Practice Research at Keele University, and Honorary Professor of Primary Care Mental Health at South Staffs and Shropshire Foundation Trust. Her main areas of interest and expertise include the management of patients with depression, multi-morbidity and unexplained symptoms. She has qualitative research methods expertise, drawing on theories from both social sciences and psychology, but always with a focus on clinical practice. She is the Royal College of General Practitioners ‘Curriculum Advisor, Mental Health’, on a number of National Institute for Health Research funding panels, and currently a member of the NICE Clinical Guideline Groups Depression (update) and Multi-morbidity - work which directly impacts on commissioning decisions and patient care. Carolyn says “most importantly, I am a wife and mother”.
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Thursday 9th July 09.00 - 09.45
Professor Rona Moss-Morris Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London
Supporting people with medically unexplained symptoms Rona Moss-Morris is Professor of Psychology as Applied to Medicine. She is head of the Health Psychology Section at the renowned Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London. She is National Advisor to NHS England for Increasing Access to Psychological Therapies for People with Long Term and Medically Unexplained conditions. She has been researching psychological factors that affect symptom experience and adjusting to chronic conditions for the past 20 years. This research has been used to design cognitive behavioural interventions, including web based interventions, for a range of patient groups. Randomised controlled trials to test the efficacy of these interventions form a key component of her research. Professor Moss-Morris’s work has been published in leading medical and psychology journals and texts including the Lancet, BMJ, Psychological Medicine, and Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. She was Editor-in-Chief of Psychology and Health, the principal European health psychology journal from 2006-2010.
Friday 10th July
09.00 - 09.45
Professor Bruce Guthrie University of Dundee
Multimorbidity: new paradigm or the emperor’s new clothes? Bruce Guthrie is Professor of Primary Care Medicine at the University of Dundee Medical School where he leads the Quality, Safety and Informatics Research Group, which conducts applied research to translate basic and clinical research into effective and reliable clinical practice. He was previously an MRC Health Services Research Training Fellow in Edinburgh, an NIHR/CSO Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Dundee, and a Harkness Fellow in Healthcare Policy at the University of California, San Francisco. His research interests focus on the definition, measurement and improvement of quality and safety. His current work primarily examines prescribing safety and multimorbidity, including developing and testing complex interventions in both fields. As well as conducting research, he practices clinically in a socioeconomically deprived area of Scotland, and is a member of a number of NHS advisory bodies, including chairing the guideline development group for the NICE guideline “Multimorbidity: Clinical Assessment and Management”. http://medicine.dundee.ac.uk/staff-member/professor-bruce-guthrie 17
POSTER PROGRAMME
Key - The coloured spots within the programme correspond to the categories or topics opposite:
POSTER SESSION 1 - Wednesday 8th July Set-up: between 10.30 and 12.00 Discussion during afternoon break Poster to be taken down: after 16.00 and before 18.00. P1.01 A Comparison of General Practitioners and Hospital Doctors Selfreported Confidence and Competence in Palliative Care
I
People With Chronic Disease
Christopher Williamson
P1.03 L-HOP: Lung Health of OPiate usersA pilot study to assess the feasibility of assessment of respiratory health in opiate misusers attending a specialist community based clinic
Caroline Mitchell
P1.18 Developing enabling health care partnerships between nurses and patients in general practice
Jane Desborough P1.19 Risk Management of Medicines Saad Shakir
P1.04 Reduced salt intake for heart failure Kamal Mahtani P1.05 Key Concepts in Qualitative Research Methodology for Academic GPs: A Literature Review
P1.20 Digital access for patients: quality and service outcomes of online history taking
Richard Sills
Liz Walton
following the prescription of antidepressants P
and aspirin and the use of proton pump inhibitors for gastro-duodenal protection in the UK: a cross-sectional study using the CPRD database
Yana Vinogradova
P1.07 Should GPs avoid ethics? Andrew Papanikitas
P1.22 Title: The impact of group work as a method of service delivery
P1.08 Comparing what patients value and what they experience in
Abigail Barkham
by Community Matrons to support those living with multiple long-term conditions: a grounded theory analysis
English general practice: a cross-sectional survey S
S
P1.23 Understanding symptom appraisal and help-seeking in people with symptoms suspicious of pancreatic cancer: a qualitative interview study
P1.09 A new means to promote organ donation : Doctors’ views on discussing organ donation in the primary care setting - A qualitative study P
P1.10 Access to healthcare for long-term conditions in women involved in street-based prostitution: a qualitative study
Katie Mills
P
P1.24 Stroke survivors and their families receive information and support from an online forum through personal or family participation: insight from 2,349 users of the Talkstroke forum
Anna De Simoni
Anna Taylor
P1.25 The prevention of Acute Kidney Injury: A qualitative study
P1.11 The development of an organisational checklist to measure the
exploring the implementation of ‘sick day rules’ in primary care
implementation of Person Centred Integrated Care
Jane Horrell
S
P1.21 Trends in the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
P1.06 An audit investigating the frequency of follow up consultation
Jennifer Rea
P
P1.17 The Role of Health Literacy In The Health Management Of Older
cancer: a shift to the right finding on younger age in Indonesia
Coral Sirdifield
E
P1.16 The development and evaluation of an e-learning module on Victoria Tzortziou Brown
P1.02 Demographic differences of right-sided and left-sided colorectal
Robert Vaughan
P1.15 Stroke Prevention by Medical Students Jake Scott
shoulder pain for General Practitioners (GPs) using ADDIE methodology
Sarah Mills
Oryza Gryagus Prabu
P1.14 Developing family practice research and academic capacity in Greece I Christos Lionis
Rebecca Morris S
P1.12 Career-long clinical supervision to improve the quality and safety of patient care: a response to Berwick and Francis
P1.26 An exploration of the psychological impact and adaptation postmyocardial infarction in UK South Asians
Mimi Bhattacharyya
Jonathon Tomlinson
P1.27 Benefit of a process evaluation during the pilot phase of a cluster P1.13 The impact of incident polymyalgia rheumatica on intimate and
randomised controlled trial to improve management of multi-morbidity in primary care - the 3D study
sexual relationships: results from an incident primary care cohort
Sara Muller 18
P
Cindy Mann
P = Practice
I = International health
E = Education
S = Health services
P1.28 The association between changes in practice and practice
P1.42 The use of Gamification in Health Care apps to modify Health
population characteristics and difference in self-referred discharged Emergency Department attendance between 2009/10 and 2012/13: a longitudinal study
Behaviour - a review and content analysis
Elizabeth Edwards
Peter Tammes
S
P1.43 Patient Values and Patient Experiences in English General Practice: A Comparison by Patient Characteristics
P1.29 Anticipatory care planning using electronic Key Information
Ana Godoy Caballero
Summaries; a mixed methods study
Julia Tapsfield
S
P1.44 The Development of the Patient Safety Toolkit for General Practices in England
P1.30 Trends in kidney function assessments in Oxfordshire between
Brian Bell
P
1985-2013, too much testing?
Jason Oke
P1.45 How do research participants respond to questionnaires on
P1.32 The association between long-term opioid use for chronic
sensitive topics?: A case study of a self-report scale used in domestic violence and health research, using thinkaloud cognitive interviewing
non-cancer pain (CNCP) in women and endocrine side effects: a comprehensive systematic review of the literature
Maggie Evans
Emily Wersocki
P1.46 Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs Associated Adverse
P1.33 Exploring Innovative Community Education Placements (ICEPs)
Events on Renal Function - a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Observational Studies
for junior doctors in training
Xinyu Zhang
Melvyn Jones
P
E
P1.34 Evidence-ÂBased Recommendations for the Reduction of Polypharmacy in
POSTER SESSION 2 - Thursday 9th July
Yolanda Martinez
Set-up: between 08.00 and 10.00 Discussion during lunch and afternoon break Poster to be taken down: after 16.30 and before 18.00
P1.35 The Primary Care Practice Improvement Tool (PC-PIT):
P2.01 Inflammatory biomarkers as a predictor of exacerbation frequency
Development and trial of an approach to improve organisational performance in Australian primary health care
in COPD: a systematic review of biomarkers applicable to primary care
Older People with Multiple Chronic Conditions: A Set of Systematic Reviews.
Lisa Crossland-Pafumi
Helen Ashdown I
S
P1.36 Screening and case finding for major depressive disorder with the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9): a diagnostic meta-analysis
Andrew S Moriarty
P2.02 Quantification of the risk of cervical cancer in symptomatic primary care patients
Sarah Walker
P
P
P1.37 Patient experience measures for Person-Centred Integrated Care (PCIC) S Thava Priya Sugavanam
P2.03 Risk prediction models for colorectal neoplasia and cancer: a systematic review
Juliet Usher-Smith
P1.38 Psychoeducational interventions for informal caregivers of people
P2.04 Broadening the reach of quality improvement: what can be learnt
with dementia: a systematic review
from rural and remote Australian Indigenous primary health care services that dramatically improve their performance in response to continuous quality improvement?
Despina Laparidou
P
P1.39 Scenario-based training increases confidence of pre-graduation
Sarah Larkins
I
medical students
Nick Breen
E
P1.40 What have we learnt about the design, implementation and use of
P2.05 Outcomes arising from Primary Care: A Delphi Consensus Study Mairead Murphy
written action plans in children with long term conditions in primary care? Systematic review and qualitative synthesis of the literature
P2.06 Young people’s views and experiences of a mobile phone texting
Andrea Waldecker
Rebecca French
P1.41 Clinical characteristics of pertussis-associated cough: a
P2.07 Transformations in General Practice: Using Narrative to explore
diagnostic accuracy systematic review
Abigail Moore
intervention to promote safer sex behaviours
workforce retention P
Jennifer Napier
S
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POSTER PROGRAMME
Key - The coloured spots within the programme correspond to the categories or topics opposite:
P2.08 Unexplained physical symptom severity in patients attending nine
P2.21 An exploratory study of the acceptability and perceived value of
general practices in London: cross-sectional study
electronic multi-compartment medication devices to inform a subsequent RCT of their effect on medication adherence
Kethakie Sumathipala
Christine Bond P2.09 The potential for community-based alternative care pathways for patients after suspected seizures - a literature review
P2.22 A Mindfulness-based programme for patients with chronic pain:
Hannah Dudhill
findings from the questionnaires
Christine Bond
P
P2.10 Self-monitoring blood pressure in hypertension, patient and provider perspectives; a systematic review and thematic synthesis
P2.23 BATHE (Bath Additives in the Treatment of Childhood Eczema):
Benjamin Fletcher
protocol for multicentre randomised controlled trial in primary care
Miriam Santer P2.11 Implementing cross-cultural communication guidelines and training initiatives on the ground: A participatory study exploring <i>implementation work </i>with multiple stakeholders in five European primary care settings
Katja Gravenhorst
P2.24 Adaptable, pragmatic approach to facilitate research in practice: the FORM-2C strategy
Mary Selwood I
P2.25 An Overview of Systematic Reviews of Health Technologies to P2.12 Establishing the potential validity of English GP Patient Survey
Reduce Unplanned Hospital Admissions among Adults
items evaluating out-of-hours care
Niklas Bobrovitz
Suzanne Richards P2.13 Effect of health status on GP patient survey results Charlotte Weston
S
S
P2.26 Patient benefits of empathy and expectations: preliminary results from a systematic review and meta-analysis S
Jeremy Howick
P2.14 Mr Grumpy becomes Mr Happy: Effective sleep treatment using
P2.27 Post-marketing withdrawal of medicinal products because of
Community Pharmacists
adverse drug reactions: a systematic review
Rebecca Porter
Igho Onakpoya
P2.15 Measuring the impact of financial incentives on the implementation
P2.28 Case-finding for anxiety and/or depression and joint pain in Long
of screening and brief alcohol interventions in UK primary care: a mixed methods investigation
Term Conditions: The ENHANCE Study
Valerie Tan
Amy Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Donnell
P2.29 The role of professional interpreters in shared decision making P2.16 Treatment outcomes in schizophrenia: service user perspectives
consultations: a discourse analysis
and experiences of treatment and services
Katie Phillips
P
Helen Lloyd P2.17 Getting the balance right: the use and consequences of different
P2.30 impact analysis of clinical prediction rules relevant to primary care Maike Uijen
conversational strategies in sequential sessions of the NHS community pharmacy smoking cessation service
P2.31 Patient participation in undergraduate medical education in
Carol Rivas
general practice
Sophie Park
E
P2.18 Smoking Treatment Optimisation in Pharmacies (STOP) - what factors affect smoker recruitment and retention in the NHS community pharmacy stop smoking service?
P2.32 Application of a novel approach to medication review in post-
Ratna Sohanpal
Carol Sinnott
P2.19 Determinants and survival outcomes of exclusion from the
P2.33 Adverse Childhood Experience and Health Service Utilisation:
UKâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s primary care pay-for-performance programme: a retrospective cohort study
findings from a primary care-based study.
David Springate
graduate training in General Practice E
Carol Sinnott S
P2.34 Maternal vitamin D concentration and its association with dietary P2.20 Ethnic variation and risk of COPD: what is the role of smoking intensity? Alexander Gilkes 20
intake
Fariba Aghajafari
P
P = Practice
I = International health
E = Education
S = Health services
P2.35 The risk of injuries in children and young people with attention-
P3.05 Global analysis of primary care research internationally Frank Sullivan
deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) compared to children and young people without
Vibhore Prasad
I
P3.06 A double blind randomised controlled trial of Chinese herbs for the treatment of recurrent urinary tract infections (RUTIs); a feasibility study
P2.36 The association between literacy and health behaviours - a cross
Andrew Flower
sectional analysis
Kay Benyon
P3.07 Frequency of Renal Monitoring with Cystatin-C and Creatinine: the FORM-2C study
P2.37 Variation in time-lags for recruitment tasks in primary care: impact
Mary Selwood
on study delivery and potential solutions
Morag Farquhar
P3.08 How do staff from GP out-of-hours services use patient feedback to drive quality improvement? A qualitative interview study
P2.38 Lay perspectives on GPs’ use of electronic decision support tools
Suzanne Richards
S
for cancer during consultation
Julie Walabyeki
P3.09 To self-disclose or not self-disclose - that is our question.A systematic review of clinical self-disclosure
Bruce Arroll
P2.39 Measuring health care professionals’ attitudes towards receiving patient feedback: the development of the Value of Patient Feedback Scale
Jenni Burt
P3.11 Applicability of the Health Information Technology Acceptance
P2.40 Additive impact of the 7 and 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate
Model in assessing readiness of older patients with multiple chronic diseases to adopt telecare - qualitative study
Jolien Vos
vaccination programmes on hospital admissions for pneumonia and empyema in children in England: a time-series analysis 2001-14
Christina Atchison
P3.12 Consequences of how FMS/CWP is positioned within the
P2.41 Text messaging to increase safer sex behaviours: The development
Victoria Silverwood
S
curriculum - perspectives of medical students: a qualitative study
of a theory and evidence based intervention
E
P3.13 The use of action research to design a self-management program
Caroline Free
among hypertensive patients in Thailand
P2.42 Key stakeholder views of consent for research participation during acute or emergency treatment: a rapid review
Nithra Kitreerawutiwong
I
P3.14 Defence medical services GP specialty registrars’ success-
Nina Gobat
satisfaction paradox: a qualitative exploration
Toby Holland
POSTER SESSION 3 - Friday 10th July
E
Set-up: between 08.00 and 09.30 Discussion during morning break Poster to be taken down: after 13.30 and before 14.00.
P3.15 An Educational Intervention for Overdose Prevention and
P3.01 Why does telehealth for long term conditions have only modest
P3.16 Why do adults with palliative care needs present to the emergency
Naloxone Distribution by General Practice Trainees
Gerard Bury
effects?
Chris Salisbury
S
department? A systematic review of the literature
Emilie Green
P3.02 The development of family medicine around the world: What have
P3.17 Depression and anxiety: impact on service use in patients with
we learned?
advanced Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Katherine Rouleau
I
P
Carole Gardener
P3.03 Specifying the Content of Home-Based Behaviour Change
P3.18 Modified Prescription Event Monitoring: Detecting Adverse Drug
Interventions for Frail Older People: A Systematic Review
Events In Primary Care
Ana Jovicic
Saad Shakir
P3.04 Using Clinical Codes to Record Research Activity in a Primary
P3.19 What do parents want? Respite care needs for children and young
Care Environment
people with high level, complex support needs
Simon Wathall
Gail Prileszky 21
POSTER PROGRAMME P3.20 Antivirals for influenza-Like Illness? an rCt of Clinical and Cost
P3.33 A general practice population study investigating awareness of
effeciveness in primary CarE (ALIC4E). Work Package 4 of the PREPARE (Platform foR European Preparedness Against (Re-)emerging Epidemics Programme Grant
potential cancer symptoms in smokers and never-smokers
Johanna Cook
P3.34 Testing innovation in primary care commissioning: quantitative
Julie Walabyeki
P
evaluation of the Greater Manchester Primary Care Demonstrators
P3.21 Challenges faced in providing scenario-based training to senior
Jonathan Stokes
S
medical students (2010-2015)
Nick Breen
E
records: mental and physical health in Lambeth
P3.22 Evidence for strategies that improve recruitment and retention of
Charlotte Woodhead
adults aged â&#x2030;Ľ65 years to observational studies and randomised trials: a systematic review
P3.36 Defining cases of anxiety and depression using primary care data:
Rosie J. Lacey
an external validation
P3.23 Does mindfullness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) for recurrent depression also improve physical health in patients with mental-physical multimorbidity? A qualitative evaluation
Stewart Mercer P3.24 Patient and caregiver experiences of utilising out of hours primary care for cancer pain
Rosalind Adam
S
John Macleod P3.37 A study of the relationship between Blood Pressure control and depressive symptoms in risk prediction in patients with cardiometabolic disease
Bhautesh Jani P3.38 New migrant health beliefs, values and experiences - findings from a qualitative study
P3.25 Primary care consultation rates among people with and without severe mental illness: a UK cohort study using the Clinical Practice Research Database
Evangelos Kontopantelis
P3.35 Linking general practice and secondary mental health care
S
Antje Lindenmeyer
I
P3.39 Engaging primary care systems in digital health technology Siobhan Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor
S
P3.26 The development of a Patient Reported Experience Measure (PREM) for use in UK ambulance services
P3.40 Health Promotion Interventions for Mild Frailty: a Systematic
Fiona Togher
Review
Celia Belk P3.27 Early Identification of familial hypercholesterolaemia in general practice with the use of patient -specific reminders: Focus group of General Practitioners
Jennifer Tranter
P3.41 Improving referral rates to child weight management services new approaches to tackling childhood obesity in Primary Care P
P3.28 Multimorbidity and functional decline in community-dwelling
P3.42 Caring for people living with and beyond cancer: an online survey
adults: a systematic review
of English GPs
Aine Ryan
Juliet Usher-Smith
P3.29 Teaching medical students about obesity - the integral role of GP tutors E Rebecca Pound P3.30 Association between polymyalgia rheumatica and depression: a P
P3.31 Workload and efficiency effects of a GP telephone consulting led system S Richard Sills P3.32 Can predictors of successful clinician and GP practice recruitment be established? Analysis from a large primary care prospective cohort study of children with acute cough and RTI
Niamh M Redmond 22
P3.43 Developing a quality control framework for mobile app based health behaviour change interventions: Adapting the NICE behaviour change guidance
Caroline Mitchell
systematic review
Arani Vivekanantham
Sean Perera
P3.44 Quality and Impact of Patient and Public Involvement in Primary Care Research: Results of a Survey of Researchers
Steven Blackburn
P
MINI SYMPOSIA Wednesday 8th July 13.50 - 15.20 Room L5 Parallel 1E Mini-symposium 1 - How can research impact be measured?
Aim: This symposium is designed to provide an account of a range of approaches, including traditional and newer metrics, to the assessment of the impact of published, peer-reviewed research. Attendees will learn about this and have the opportunity to discuss how the dissemination and uptake of research is likely to be measured in the future.
Speakers: “Traditional” measurement and outcomes of the journal impact factor for the BJGP and measures of activity on the journal’s website such as downloads and page views.
The role of primary care in prostate cancer follow-up: findings from PROSPECTIV - a pilot trial of a nurse-led psycho-educational intervention delivered in primary care Eila Watson, Oxford Brookes University A system re-design project facilitating the safe discharge of stable survivors to primary care. Key elements: (1) an automated PSA surveillance system linking secondary and primary care; (2) person-centred holistic needs assessment and patient-held care plan review; (3) a nurse-led out-ofhospital individualised intervention (TOPCAT-P pilot trial). Andrei Stanciu, Bangor University: Prostate Cancer Follow-up in North Wales Discussion will be held after the presentations.
Intended audience: GPs, practice/community nurses, researchers, trial methodologists, policy makers, health service managers
11.15 - 12.45 Room L6
Roger Jones, BJGP Editor and BJGP Web Editor Erika Niesner,
Parallel 2F Mini-symposium 3 - Quality improvement in Primary Health Care in Low and Middle Income Countries - managing context
Experiences in assessing the impact of primary care research. Paul Little, member of the HEFCE REF primary care panel
Aims:
How the system works and what it offers to the healthcare research community. Jean Liu, product development manager at Altmetric Discussion will follow each presentation and a final summing up will attempt to capture a future vision of research impact assessment. The intended audience includes anyone with an interest in writing, reading and implementing primary care research
F To
discuss research on quality improvement in PHC in Low and Middle income Countries F To
discuss how to develop and promote trial methodologies which take better account of research context in LMICs, providing evidence about what will work where.
Educational objectives /Intended outcome:
Thursday 9th July
understanding of the importance of research context and the marked heterogeneity of effect between sites in most LMIC quality improvement initiatives
11.15 - 12.45 Room L5
F Agreement
Parallel 2E Mini-symposium 2 - Optimising prostate cancer survivorship care - where does primary care fit in?
Speakers:
Aim: to consider the main issues facing patients and their families in the survivorship phase of their journey, and to consider what role primary care could/should have in optimising care provision in the period following the end of initial treatment. Chaired by Clare Wilkinson, Professor Primary Care, Bangor University
Speakers: Exploring the quality of life and well-being of men with prostate cancer and their partners and gaps in service provision: findings from a qualitative meta-synthesis. Carol Rivas and Richard Wagland, University of Southampton
F Improved
on joint working to develop a funding application to support further work in this area
Claire Blacklock: Impact of contextual factors on the effect of interventions to improve health worker performance in sub-Saharan Africa: review of randomised clinical trials David Mant: Demand-led financing to reduce maternal mortality in Mozambique - is it the right context? Merlin Willcox: In what conditions do death reviews lead to reductions in maternal and child mortality in SubSaharan Africa?
Intended audience: GPs/Primary health care researchers interested in global health and trial methodology for assessing quality improvement initiatives in LMICs
23
MINI SYMPOSIA Thursday 9th July 14.15 - 15.45 Room L5 Parallel 3E Mini-symposium 4 - Successfully (mis) translating organisational interventions from research to practice: experience from three large trials of complex interventions to improve primary care prescribing safety
Aim and intended outcome: The aim is to increase understanding among participants of strategies to successfully translate research-evaluated complex interventions into routine organisation and practice, including understanding of strategies which increase the likelihood of translation and discussion of the range of outcomes which count as ‘success’. Part 1: What does the literature tell us about strategies to promote successful translation? A brief review of barriers and facilitators of translation into policy and practice, and strategies to maximise translation Bruce Guthrie Part 2: Brief summary of the three prescribing interventions trialled and their effectiveness Tony Avery, Bruce Guthrie and Tobias Dreischulte
Speakers: The problem of diagnostic error, and why it is difficult to move to evidence-based diagnosis. Terminologies, classifications and types of evidence. What a LHS is and how it could solve the problem of collecting diagnostic evidence. Brendan Delaney, King’s College London. Experimental evidence to support diagnostic decision support arising from a recent RCT of simulated cases, showing a 6% absolute improvement in diagnostic accuracy with ‘suggestions’ based on the presenting problem. Impact on diagnostic accuracy of a full evaluation of the DSS in a controlled before-after study with GPs, using actors as simulated patients. Olga Kostopoulou, King’s College London. A generalizable model of diagnostic knowledge. How to make evidence available in a computable format, and to curate and maintain high quality evidence. Derek Corrigan, Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland.
Part 3: An honest account of translational strategies and what has actually got implemented so far including how NHS implementation differs from the interventions trialled Tony Avery and Bruce Guthrie
Discussion including opportunity for hands-on with the decision support system (DSS) integrated with the InPS Vision3 EHR.
Part 4: Interactive component Audience narratives
Highly multidisciplinary symposium bringing together clinicians, researchers, psychologists, statisticians and informatics experts interested in improving patient safety with respect to diagnosis.
Intended audience: Researchers at any career stage, commissioners and clinicians.
Friday 10th July 11.30 - 12.30 Room L5 Parallel 4E Mini-symposium 5 - Implementing a Learning Health System for diagnosis in Primary Care
Aim: Diagnosis is one of the primary tasks of the GP, diagnostic error is also the single greatest reason for litigation against GPs. Decision support is one possible intervention to help with this task, but existing systems lack evidence-based content, integration with the electronic health record (EHR), and have been designed with no regard for either the cognitive tasks of the GP or the human-computer interface needed to support them. Further, conducting large studies to develop diagnostic evidence is notoriously difficult and costly. Such a problem is an ideal target for the ‘Learning Health 24
System’ (LHS), describing a digital infrastructure that supports research and knowledge translation activities as part of routine health IT. FP7-TRANSFoRm, an EU large collaborative project has supported the development of a LHS for diagnosis in primary care that will have completed its evaluation by May this year.
Intended audience:
WORKSHOPS Workshop 1
Aim and intended outcome
Wednesday 8th July, 13.50 - 15.20, Room L6
To introduce the co-creation approach, linking researchers and end-users in embedding research into practice.
Understanding, reporting and conducting pilot and feasibility trials
To share successful ‘research into practice’ initiatives involving chronic disease management and quality improvement, utilising the co-creation approach.
Facilitators: Sandra Eldridge, Queen Mary University of London Christine Bond, University of Aberdeen Gillian Lancaster, University of Lancaster Mike Campbell, University of Sheffield
To involve workshop participants in applying the principles of co-creation to their current research programmes.
Aim and intended outcome/educational objectives
Following a well-attended workshop at SAPC in 2011 on pilot and feasibility studies, we have been developing an extension to the CONSORT statement for pilot trials, and an overarching framework for defining these studies. In this workshop we aim to: introduce participants to an overarching conceptual framework for defining pilot and feasibility studies conducted in preparation for a randomised controlled trial of effectiveness
Intended audience:
Researchers, clinicians, managers, and policy makers interested in increasing research impact via co-creation methodologies that build value with key stakeholders and end-users.
Workshop 5 Friday 10th July, 13.30 - 15.00, Room L4
F
Educating for compassion in primary care
present the CONSORT extension for pilot randomised trials, particularly focusing on where this differs from the main CONSORT statement
Facilitators Richard Knox, University of Nottingham Rodger Charlton, University of Nottingham Jane Coomber, University of Nottingham
F
use participants’ pilot and feasibility trials to exemplify good practice in reporting, design and conduct F
Aim
Intended audience
To explore ways of meaningfully delivering a curriculum of compassionate care in primary care to our undergraduate medical students and postgraduate trainees.
The workshop will appeal to experienced and novice trialists from clinical and non-clinical disciplines. It would be helpful if participants could bring with them details of any pilot trials they have been/will be involved with to aid discussion as outlined above. Workshop 2 - Please note there is no workshop 2
Workshop 3 Thursday 9th July, 14.15 - 15.45, Room L6 Enhancing your career through working with the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)
Objectives
1. Shared understanding of the barriers and facilitators to implementing a robust curriculum focused on compassionate care 2. Shared understanding of the benefits of delivering a comprehensive curriculum focused around compassionate care 3. Collaboration for educational research focused on education of compassion in the primary care curriculum Intended audience:
Educators involved in undergraduate and postgraduate training in general practice, practitioners and researchers with an interest in compassion.
Workshop 6
Facilitators Martin Ashton-Key, NIHR Evaluation Trials and Studies Coordinating
Friday 10th July, 13.30 - 15.00, Room L5
Centre (NETSCC) Kate Dowson, NETSCC
Using PROMs in Primary Care in theory and practice
Aim and intended outcome:
Facilitators Jose Valderas, University of Exeter Medical School Ian Porter, University of Exeter Medical School
We are proposing to run a workshop for GPs at all career stages wishing to develop their professional skills and research interests. The workshop will provide an overview of the NIHR and highlight opportunities for professional development, research funding opportunities and improving patient care through engagement with the organisation. The intended outcome for participants is that they understand how working with the NIHR can benefit both clinicians and patients and can apply this directly to their current role. Intended audience:
The workshop will be of interest to GPs at all career stages wishing to develop their professional skills and research interests.
Workshop 4 Friday 10th July, 11.30 - 12.30, Room L6 Co-creation of knowledge in primary care: researchers really can change the world - if they embrace new paradigms! Facilitators T Greenhalgh, University of Oxford C Jackson, University of Queensland, Australia J Smith, Director of Policy, The Nuffield Trust, London
Aim and Objectives
Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) are health status assessments elicited from the patients themselves. The new NHS Outcomes Framework places PROMs among the key measures of performance of the National Health Services, but there has so far been limited evidence on their use in Primary Care. The learning objectives of this workshop are: (i) to gain a better understanding of what PROMs are (and what they are not); (ii) to be able to complete, administer score and interpret different types of PROMs; (iii) to be able to identify and appraise PROMs for use in Primary Care; (iv) to know best practice and the supporting evidence for their use in Primary Care; and (v) to learn from hands on ongoing experience of routinely using PROMS to patients with multiple conditions in GP surgeries in the South West. Intended audience
This workshop is targeted to anyone who may be interested in obtaining knowledge on how to implement PROMs in clinical practice. Participants from a multidisciplinary background will be welcomed. No prior knowledge of any aspect of PROMs is required. Participants with substantial previous knowledge of the topic may find updates on repositories of instruments, appraisal tools and discussion of research needs in the area of interest. 25
SOCIAL PROGRAMME
Wednesday 8th July 2015 18.30 to 20.00 Drinks with the Dinosaurs Reception at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History Mingle with colleagues, ancient relics and dinosaurs in one of Oxfordâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s most spectacular examples of neo-Gothic architecture. Drinks and canapĂŠs served. Entertainment by a cappella group In The Pink Dress: as you wish Ticket included in the registration fee. Dining out - please make your own arrangements for dining out after the drinks reception. A list of restaurant suggestions is available at the registration desk.
Optional - Skeptics in the Pub
The AllTrials campaign calls for all past and present clinical trials to be registered and their full methods and summary results to be reported - half of all trials go unpublished.
Please sign up in advance at the registration desk. 19.30: The Wig & Pen, 9-13 George Street, Oxford OX1 2AU Skeptics in the Pub: the AllTrials Campaign Professor Carl Heneghan, Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, University of Oxford.
A co-founder of the popular initiative, Professor Carl Heneghan discusses how the campaign is making progress by leaps and bounds, and issues raised in the five years spent obtaining the unpublished evidence for Tamiflu, as well as the implications for health care and general practice in the future. Free event; attendees may buy dinner in the pub.
Thursday 9th July 2015 Optional activities 17:15-18:30 Join either a tour of the University of Oxford botanic garden or a run around scenic Oxford. Please sign up for these events at the registration desk - places are limited.
University of Oxford botanic garden tour 17.15 meet at the SAPC Conference registration desk, Andrew Wiles Building Founded in 1621 as a physic garden growing plants for medicinal research, the University of Oxford Botanic Garden is the oldest in Britain. It has inspired famous Oxford authors including Lewis Carroll, J.R.R.Tolkien, Evelyn Waugh and Philip Pullman. Set in a beautiful riverside location, it now houses a diverse range of plants, and in July will have spectacular floral displays. Of particular interest to our conference, it is also home to a modern medicinal plant collection organised by disease area. The tour of the garden will be given by Dr Stephen Harris, who is Acting Director of the garden, Druce Curator of the Oxford University Herbaria and University Research Lecturer, and will be a general tour but with a particular focus on medicinal plants. The walking route to the garden from the conference venue will also take in some major sights of Oxford including the Bodleian Library, Radcliffe Camera and Bridge of Sighs. We will leave the foyer of the conference venue - Andrew Wiles building - at 5.15pm promptly to walk to the garden, and will aim to be back in the vicinity of the accommodation for about 6.45pm. The tour is free for conference delegates, but numbers are limited so please book a place in advance by signing up at the registration desk.
26
Oxford city sights run 17.30-17.40 - meet at Keble College Porter’s Lodge A route taking in the famous historic buildings and parks of Oxford city centre, including the Bodleian Library, Radcliffe Camera and Bridge of Sighs. The run will be about 8 km/5 miles, with a shorter circuit (approx. 4km/2.5 miles) option.
Conference Dinner at Keble College 19.00-midnight From 19.00 pre-dinner drinks will be served in the Liddon Quad, followed at 19:45 by a formal fourcourse college dinner under the tall arched ceiling and stained glass windows of Oxford’s longest Hall, opened in 1878. Disco after dinner in Keble College’s ‘goldfish bowl’ bar (the music will end at 23.00 and the bar will remain open until midnight). Dress code: Lounge suits We encourage you to dress for the occasion to mark this highlight of the social programme. A limited number of tickets are still available at £55 per person from the registration desk.
27
PEER REVIEW Scientific Committee: Susan Jebb (chair), Helen Ashdown, Helen Atherton, Dan Lasserson, Richard McManus, This year 383 abstracts were received including 354 presentation abstracts, 10 workshops, 8 mini-symposia and 11 dangerous ideas. All abstracts were peer reviewed by at least two reviewers. Reviewers scored each abstract on five areas using a six-point scale. The areas considered when scoring were: aim and rationale for the study, justification of the approach, application of the approach, presentation of results/findings, importance of the scholarship.
starting point for discussion about acceptance by the Programme Committee. The abstract scores dominated the Committee decision making but were not the sole criterion. The Committee also considered the suitability for oral or poster presentation and the overall balance and fit of the programme. The final programme consists of: 5 workshops, 4 mini-symposia, 132 posters, 112 elevator pitches and 90 oral presentations including 2 distinguished abstracts selected for presentation in the prize plenary session on Wednesday. The programme was compiled by the Scientific Committee. There were no appeals.
A mean score was obtained for each abstract using the scores assigned to it by each peer reviewer. If two scores varied by more than 8 points the abstract was assessed by a third reviewer. The abstracts were ranked according to mean score, and this ranking was then used as a
Peer reviewers were drawn from the SAPC membership following nominations by Heads of Department and a request for volunteers with experience of reviewing. The Scientific Committee thanks the peer reviewers for their valuable contribution:
Asmaa Abdelhamid
Susannah Fleming
Michelle Marshall
Ignacio Ricci-Cabello
Christine Aâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Court
Emily Fletcher
Kamal Mathani
Matthew Ridd
Sue Ashby
Simon Gay
John McBeth
Miriam Santer
Helen Ashdown
Alison Gregory
RK McKinley
Niroshan Siriwardena
Helen Atherton
Willie Hamilton
Richard McManus
Opeyemi Babatunde
Antonia Hardcastle
Sarah Mills
Maggie Bartlett
Alastair Hay
Michael Moore
David Blane
Richard Hayward
Andrew Morden
Jenni Burt
Julia Hiscock
Rebecca Morris
Paul Campbell
Alyson Huntley
Sara Muller
Melanie Chalder
Catherine Hyde
Richard Neal
Carolyn Chew-Graham
Judith Ibison
Barbara Nicholl
Alison Clements
Rachel Johnson
Diane Owen
Carol Coupland
Kelvin Jordan
Amanda Owen-Smith
Carole Crawford
Sally Kerry
Rupert Payne
Jacqueline Crowther
Nada Khan
Rafael Perera
Margaret Cupples
Lily Lai
Cath Quinn
Nefyn Williams
Chris Dowrick
Dan Lasserson
Farhan Abdul Raul
Andrea Williamson
Kate Dunn
Rosa Lau
Niamh Redmond
Andy Wilson
Hazel Everitt
Fiona MacKichan
Joanne Reeve
Fiona Wood
Sarah Smithson Ann Sunderland Peter Tammes Athina Tatsioni Sarah Tonkin-Crine Ann Van den Bruel
28
Danielle van der Windt Oliver van Hecke Akke Vellinga Yana Vinogradova Scott Wilkes
CONFERENCE INFORMATION Conference app
Internet and Email
The SAPC conference app is available to download from the app Store or Play Store on to Apple and Android devices. The full programme and all the abstracts (oral presentations, elevator pitches and posters) can be found on the app along with most of the information in this book.
Free WiFi is available throughout the University: please request a password at the registration desk. If you have access to Eduroam you should be able to use this. Press Attendance - Notice to Presenters and Authors
Places may be pre-booked at the registration desk for Workshops, Special Interest Groups (SIGs) and Wednesday and Thursday evening optional activities: see the social programme pages.
There may be journalists attending the conference. Journalists will be asked by the organisers to identify themselves to presenters and presenters should notify the journalist if they do not wish their work to be reported. Presenters may also like to let the chair of their session know if they do not wish their work to be reported and ask journalists to identify themselves in the session.
Speaker Preview Room C5
Publication of Abstracts
Presentations should be taken to the Speaker Preview Room, C5, at least one hour before the start of the session in which you are presenting so that they can be remotely transferred into the appropriate session room. If you have already submitted your presentation by email you may review and update it in this room.
At present there are no plans to publish the abstracts as a supplement to a journal.
Parallel Oral and Elevator Pitch Sessions
Attendance Certificates
Session chairs and speakers are requested to go to the room where the session will take place at least 10 minutes before the start time to meet each other and familiarise themselves with the audio-visual equipment. A member of the conference staff team will be present during the session to assist.
If you wish to receive an attendance certificate please complete the Survey Monkey evaluation form where you can request one at the end of the questions. The link will be emailed to conference delegates on Monday 13th July: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/CDDNWLK
Pre-book Workshops, Special Interest Groups (SIGs) and Wednesday and Thursday evening optional activities
The conference abstracts can be found on the SAPC app and on-line at www.sapc.ac.uk via the conference programme.
Time slots: Oral presentations in parallel sessions: 10 minutes presentation and 5 minutes Q&A Elevator pitch presentations: 3 minutes presentation and 2 minutes Q&A. The next speaker should get ready to present during the Q&A of the previous speaker. Please keep to time! Poster Presenters Please see the presenter index for your poster board number or enquire at the registration desk. Poster session 1 - Wednesday 8th July Set-up: between 10.30 and 12.00 Discussion during afternoon break Poster to be taken down: after 16.00 and before 18.00. Poster session 2 - Thursday 9th July Set-up: between 08.00 and 10.00 Discussion during lunch and afternoon break Poster to be taken down: after 16.30 and before 18.00 Poster session 3 - Friday 10th July Set-up: between 08.00 and 09.30 Discussion during morning break Poster to be taken down: after 13.30 and before 14.00. 29
EXHIBITORS AND SPONSORS We are grateful to Swiss Medical Press GmbH for sponsoring the delegate bags. Exhibitors
Clinical Practice Research Datalink www.cprd.com
Swiss Medical Press GmbH Swiss Medical Press is a Swiss-based communications company that specialises in creating, developing and delivering medical, scientific and technical information to the healthcare, educational and professional domains. They also publish the Journal of Comorbidity: an international, open-access, peer-reviewed journal for original clinical and experimental research articles, guidelines, editorials, commentaries, policies, protocols, and critical review articles on the pathophysiology, diagnosis, prevention and management of comorbidity. The journal provides a forum for scientists, researchers and healthcare professionals to share their research, experience and insight into diverse aspects of medicine in order to optimise the management of patients with comorbidity/multimorbidity. More information can be found at: www.swissmedicalpress.com; www.jcomorbidity.com or connect on Twitter @JComorbidity.
Healthtalk.org Provides free, reliable information about health issues, by sharing people’s real-life experiences.People share their stories about cancer, autism, motor-neurone disease, drugs, pregnancy, depression and much more. www.healthtalk.org National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Infrastructure Oxford F NIHR Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) Oxford Provides high quality research-based evidence to inform rapid implementation of new services, research and innovation both locally, countrywide and internationally. www.clahrc-oxford.nihr.ac.uk F NIHR
Diagnostic Evidence Co-operative Oxford A national resource for identifying, evaluating and implementing in vitro diagnostic tests in primary care. www.oxford.dec.nihr.ac.uk F NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre A partnership that brings together the research expertise of the University of Oxford and the clinical skills of staff of Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust with the aim of supporting translational research 30
The Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) is a secure, world-class e-health research system with over 25 years’ experience in the field of public health research. CPRD is jointly provided and funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) in partnership with the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). CPRD realises the research potential of anonymised NHS healthcare and demographic datasets from primary and secondary care as well as from specific disease registries and associated population data sets. CPRD’s services are designed to maximise the way this unique, national level real world resource can enable many types of observational research and deliver outputs that are beneficial to improving and safeguarding public health. These data have a proven track record in the field of Observational and Health Outcomes Research but its use in services associated with clinical trials and interventional studies is relatively recent. This is an area of research where the essential key to success is fast access to very large data sets. Capabilities include real world fast and efficient feasibility, protocol optimisation and patient recruitment for clinical trials.
and innovation to improve healthcare for patients. www.oxfordbrc.nihr.ac.uk NIHR Clinical Research Network: Thames Valley and South Midlands Helps to increase the opportunities for patients to take part in clinical research, ensures that studies are carried out efficiently, and improves the environment for commercial contract clinical research in the NHS in the Thames Valley and South Midlands area. www.crn.nihr.ac.uk/thamesvalley-and-south-midlands/ Royal College of General Practitioners The professional membership body for family doctors in the UK and overseas, committed to improving patient care, clinical standards and GP training. www.rcgp.org.uk University of Oxford Postgraduate Programme in Evidence-Based Health Care Studies Offers a range of professional development opportunities including short courses in health sciences and evidencebased health care, and MSc and DPhil programmes. www.conted.ox.ac.uk/ebhc
PRESENTER INDEX Abel, Gary
2A.2
Methodology
Thursday
Adam, Rosalind
P3.24
Poster session 3
Friday
Agbakoba, Ruth
EP1C.4
Long term conditions
Wednesday
Aghajafari, Fariba
P2.34
Poster session 2
Thursday
Ahmed, Nadeem
EP1A.5
Musculoskeletal
Wednesday
Alam, Rahul
EP3D.01
Diagnosis and cancer
Friday
Alderson, Sarah
EP2C.08
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Apenteng, Patricia
EP1C.5
Long term conditions
Wednesday
Arroll, Bruce
P3.09
Poster session 3
Friday
Asghar, Zahid
EP2A.01
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Ashdown, Helen
P2.01
Poster session 2
Thursday
Ashworth, Mark
1D.3
Prescribing
Wednesday
Atchison, Christina
P2.40
Poster session 2
Thursday
Atherton, Helen
1C.2
Delivery of General Practice
Wednesday
Atherton, Helen
EP1B.2
Consultation & communication
Wednesday
Aveyard, Paul
EP3C.06
Weight management
Friday
Bailey, Jayne
4D.3
Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s health
Friday
Baker, Amanj
EP2B.08
Prescribing
Thursday
Baker, Ruth
3B.6
Health services
Thursday
Barkham, Abigail
P1.22
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Barnes, Rebecca
2A.1
Methodology
Thursday
Barry, Eleanor
EP3D.04
Diagnosis and cancer
Friday
Bedson, John
1D.2
Prescribing
Wednesday
Belk, Celia
P3.40
Poster session 3
Friday
Bell, Brian
P1.44
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Benyon, Kay
P2.36
Poster session 2
Thursday
Berdunov, Vladislav
1D.6
Prescribing
Wednesday
Bhattacharyya, Mimi
P1.26
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Blackburn, Steven
P3.44
Poster session 3
Friday
Blane, David
EP3C.03
Weight management
Friday
Bobrovitz, Niklas
P2.25
Poster session 2
Thursday
Bond, Christine
EP1B.5
Consultation & communication
Wednesday
Bond, Christine
EP2B.03
Prescribing
Thursday
Bond, Christine
P2.21
Poster session 2
Thursday
Bond, Christine
P2.22
Poster session 2
Thursday
Breen, Nick
P1.39
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Breen, Nick
P3.21
Poster session 3
Friday
Browne, Susan
EP2C.03
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Bryce, Ashley
1B.5
Child health
Wednesday
Buni, Halima
EP2D.06
Respiratory
Thursday
Burt, Jenni
EP3A.04
Vulnerable groups
Friday
Burt, Jenni
P2.39
Poster session 2
Thursday 31
PRESENTER INDEX
32
Burton, Christopher
EP3B.01
Methodology
Friday
Bury, Gerard
EP1C.6
Long term conditions
Wednesday
Bury, Gerard
P3.15
Poster session 3
Friday
Byrne, Emma
EP2B.09
Prescribing
Thursday
Cabral, Christie
2D.2
Respiratory tract infection
Thursday
Cabral, Christie
2D.4
Respiratory tract infection
Thursday
Carberry, Crea
EP1D.1
Education
Wednesday
Carroll, Breda
EP1C.1
Long term conditions
Wednesday
Cecil, Elizabeth
1B.4
Child health
Wednesday
Chaplin, Katherine
EP2C.05
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Chew-Graham, Carolyn
EP2C.09
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Chng, Nai Rui
EP3A.07
Vulnerable groups
Friday
Christensen, Hannah
2D.1
Respiratory tract infection
Thursday
Clark, Christopher
2B.6
Hypertension
Thursday
Clark, Christopher
EP2A.10
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Clark, Christopher
EP2A.08
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Cook, Johanna
P3.20
Poster session 3
Friday
Corrigan, Derek
2A.4
Methodology
Thursday
Coton, Sonia
EP2B.04
Prescribing
Thursday
Coupland, Carol
EP2B.07
Prescribing
Thursday
Coventry, Peter
EP1C.3
Long term conditions
Wednesday
Cowling, Thomas
3B.2
Health services
Thursday
Creavin, Sam
4C.4
Elderly care/dementia
Friday
Crossland-Pafumi, Lisa
P1.35
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Davidson, Sandra
2C.3
Mental health
Thursday
Davidson, Sandra
EP2C.06
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Davidson, Sandra
EP3C.08
Weight management
Friday
Dawson, Shoba
EP3A.03
Vulnerable groups
Friday
Daykin, A
EP1F.1
Miscellaneous
Wednesday
De Simoni, Anna
P1.24
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Dennis, Sarah
EP2D.07
Respiratory
Thursday
Desborough, Jane
EP1B.4
Consultation & communication
Wednesday
Desborough, Jane
P1.18
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Dickson, Jon
EP1F.5
Miscellaneous
Wednesday
Dixon, Padraig
3C.1
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Drinkwater, Jess
EP3B.02
Methodology
Friday
Dudhill, Hannah
P2.09
Poster session 2
Thursday
Edwards, Elizabeth
P1.42
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Evans, Maggie
EP1F.7
Miscellaeneous
Wednesday
Evans, Maggie
P1.45
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Farquhar, Morag
EP2D.09
Respiratory
Thursday
Farquhar, Morag
EP2D.02
Respiratory
Thursday
PRESENTER INDEX Farquhar, Morag
P2.37
Poster session 2
Thursday
Fleetcroft, Robert
4B.3
Respiratory
Friday
Fleming, Susannah
EP2A.06
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Fletcher, Benjamin
P2.10
Poster session 2
Thursday
Fletcher, Emily
EP3B.06
Methodology
Friday
Flower, Andrew
P3.06
Poster session 3
Friday
Ford, John
EP3A.01
Vulnerable groups
Friday
Foster, Nadine
Plenary1.2 Opening session
Free, Caroline
2A.5
Methodology
Thursday
Free, Caroline
3C.3
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Free, Caroline
P2.41
Poster session 2
Thursday
French, Rebecca
P2.06
Poster session 2
Thursday
Gagyor, Ildiko
3A.4
Infectious diseases
Thursday
Gardener, Carole
P3.17
Poster session 3
Friday
Gilbody, Simon
2C.2
Mental health
Thursday
Gilkes, Alexander
P2.20
Poster session 2
Thursday
Gilleit, Yannick
EP2C.01
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Gillespie, David
EP2D.08
Respiratory
Thursday
Gobat, Nina
P2.42
Poster session 2
Thursday
Godoy Caballero, Ana
EP2A.09
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Godoy Caballero, Ana
P1.43
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Gopal, Dipesh
3C.4
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Gopalamurugan, Manju Varshaa EP1E.2
Infection
Wednesday
Grant, Sabrina
2B.5
Hypertension
Thursday
Gravenhorst, Katja
P2.11
Poster session 2
Thursday
Green, Emilie
P3.16
Poster session 3
Friday
Greenhalgh, Trisha
EP3B.05
Methodology
Friday
Guthrie, Bruce
EP2B.01
Prescribing
Thursday
Hamilton, Willie
1A.1
Cancer
Wednesday
Hay, Alastair
2D.5
Respiratory tract infection
Thursday
Hayward, Gail
3A.2
Infectious diseases
Thursday
Heron, Neil
EP1A.2
Musculoskeletal
Wednesday
Heron, Neil
EP3C.02
Weight management
Friday
Hill, Jonathan
EP1A.7
Musculoskeletal
Wednesday
Hodgkinson, James
EP2A.02
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Holland, Toby
P3.14
Poster session 3
Friday
Horrell, Jane
P1.11
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Horwood, Jeremy
4A.1
Metabolic disease
Friday
Howard, Emma
EP3C.01
Weight management
Friday
Howick, Jeremy
P2.26
Poster session 2
Thursday
Hyde, Catherine
EP1A.6
Musculoskeletal
Wednesday
Ibrahim, Buthaina
1B.1
Child health
Wednesday
Wednesday
33
PRESENTER INDEX
34
Irving, Greg
EP2A.07
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Jani, Bhautesh
2C.5
Mental health
Thursday
Jani, Bhautesh
P3.37
Poster session 3
Friday
Jones, Melvyn
P1.33
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Jordan, Rachel
4B.1
Respiratory
Friday
Josephs, Lynn
EP2D.01
Respiratory
Thursday
Jovicic, Ana
P3.03
Poster session 3
Friday
Kendrick, Tony
2C.6
Mental health
Thursday
Kerry, Sally
2A.3
Methodology
Thursday
Kitreerawutiwong, Nithra
P3.13
Poster session 3
Friday
Knox, Richard
EP1D.5
Education
Wednesday
Knox, Richard
EP1D.6
Education
Wednesday
Kokab, Farina
EP3A.08
Vulnerable groups
Friday
Kontopantelis, Evangelos
3B.4
Health services
Thursday
Kontopantelis, Evangelos
P3.25
Poster session 3
Friday
Kostopoulou, Olga
1A.5
Cancer
Wednesday
Kurtinecz, Milena
EP2A.05
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Lacey, Rosie J.
P3.22
Poster session 3
Friday
Lai, Lily
1D.4
Prescribing
Wednesday
Laparidou, Despina
P1.38
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Larkins, Sarah
P2.04
Poster session 2
Thursday
Lasserson, Dan
4A.3
Metabolic disease
Friday
Lasseter, Gemma
1C.4
Delivery of General Practice
Wednesday
Leedham-Green, Kathleen
EP1D.7
Education
Wednesday
Lewith, George
EP1F.2
Miscellaneous
Wednesday
Lindenmeyer, Antje
P3.38
Poster session 3
Friday
Lindson-Hawley, Nicola
EP3C.05
Weight management
Friday
Lionis, Christos
P1.14
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Little, Paul
2D.6
Respiratory tract infection
Thursday
Lloyd, Helen
EP2C.10
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Lloyd, Helen
P2.16
Poster session 2
Thursday
MacArtney, John
1A.3
Cancer
Wednesday
MacKeith, Pieter
EP1C.7
Long term conditions
Wednesday
MacKichan, Fiona
3B.3
Health services
Thursday
Macleod, John
P3.36
Poster session 3
Friday
Magee, Fiona
EP1D.2
Education
Wednesday
Mahtani, Kamal
P1.04
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Mallen, Christian D
3D.1
Musculoskeletal
Thursday
Manley, Petra
EP1E.4
Infection
Wednesday
Mann, Cindy
P1.27
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Mansell, Gemma
EP1A.1
Musculoskeletal
Wednesday
Mansour, Sammy
EP1D.4
Education
Wednesday
PRESENTER INDEX Martinez, Yolanda
P1.34
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Mazza, Danielle
4C.1
Elderly care/dementia
Friday
McCleary, Nicola
EP2B.05
Prescribing
Thursday
Mercer, Stewart
P3.23
Poster session 3
Friday
Mills, Katie
P1.23
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Mills, Sarah
EP1B.3
Consultation & communication
Wednesday
Mills, Sarah
EP3D.10
Diagnosis and cancer
Friday
Mills, Sarah
P1.01
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Mitchell, Caroline
P1.03
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Mitchell, Caroline
P3.43
Poster session 3
Friday
Moore, Abigail
P1.41
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Moore, Caroline
EP2D.05
Respiratory
Thursday
Morales, DR
EP2D.04
Respiratory
Thursday
Moriarty, Andrew S
P1.36
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Moriarty, Frank
1D.1
Prescribing
Wednesday
Morris, Rebecca
EP1F.6
Miscellaneous
Wednesday
Morris, Rebecca
P1.25
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Morris, Richard
EP2A.04
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Morton, LaKrista
2A.6
Methodology
Thursday
Mukhtar, Toqir
EP3D.08
Diagnosis and cancer
Friday
Muller, Ingrid
EP3A.02
Vulnerable groups
Friday
Muller, Sara
P1.13
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Murphy, Mairead
P2.05
Poster session 2
Thursday
Napier, Jennifer
P2.07
Poster session 2
Thursday
Newbould, Jennifer
1C.1
Delivery of General Practice
Wednesday
Newton, Lisa
4C.3
Elderly care/dementia
Friday
Nicholson, Brian
1A.2
Cancer
Wednesday
Nunan, David
2B.3
Hypertension
Thursday
Nunan, David
EP1C.2
Long term conditions
Wednesday
Oakeshott, Pippa
EP1E.5
Infection
Wednesday
Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connor, Siobhan
P3.39
Poster session 3
Friday
Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Donnell, Amy
P2.15
Poster session 2
Thursday
Oke, Jason
P1.30
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Onakpoya, Igho
P2.27
Poster session 2
Thursday
Papanikitas, Andrew
P1.07
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Park, Sophie
P2.31
Poster session 2
Thursday
Parsonage, Rachel
1A.6
Cancer
Wednesday
Perera, Sean
P3.41
Poster session 3
Friday
Phillips, Katie
EP1B.1
Consultation & communication
Wednesday
Phillips, Katie
P2.29
Poster session 2
Thursday
Pickles, Tim
3A.5
Infectious diseases
Thursday
Pickles, Tim
3D.4
Musculoskeletal
Thursday 35
PRESENTER INDEX
36
Porter, Rebecca
P2.14
Poster session 2
Thursday
Potter, Caroline
3B.5
Health services
Thursday
Pound, Rebecca
P3.29
Poster session 3
Friday
Powell, John
4B.4
Respiratory
Friday
Prabu, Oryza Gryagus
P1.02
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Prasad, Vibhore
P2.35
Poster session 2
Thursday
Prileszky, Gail
4D.2
Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s health
Friday
Prileszky, Gail
EP1B.7
Consultation & communication
Wednesday
Prileszky, Gail
P3.19
Poster session 3
Friday
Prosser Evans, Huw
EP1E.1
Infection
Wednesday
Rea, Jennifer
P1.09
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Redmond, Niamh M
P3.32
Poster session 3
Friday
Redmond, Patrick
EP2B.06
Prescribing
Thursday
Rees, Claire
3A.6
Infectious diseases
Thursday
Ricci-Cabello, Ignacio
1C.3
Delivery of General Practice
Wednesday
Ricci-Cabello, Ignacio
EP3B.08
Methodology
Friday
Richards, Suzanne
P2.12
Poster session 2
Thursday
Richards, Suzanne
P3.08
Poster session 3
Friday
Ridd, Matthew
1B.2
Child health
Wednesday
Rivas, Carol
P2.17
Poster session 2
Thursday
Rouleau, Katherine
P3.02
Poster session 3
Friday
Round, Thomas
EP3D.09
Diagnosis and cancer
Friday
Ryan, Aine
P3.28
Poster session 3
Friday
Salisbury, Chris
2C.1
Mental health
Thursday
Salisbury, Chris
3C.5
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Salisbury, Chris
P3.01
Poster session 3
Friday
Santer, Miriam
P2.23
Poster session 2
Thursday
Sarkar, Chandra
EP2C.07
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Saunders, Ben
3D.6
Musculoskeletal
Thursday
Schmidt, Konrad
3D.5
Musculoskeletal
Thursday
Schwartz, Claire
EP3A.06
Vulnerable groups
Friday
Scott, Catherine
EP2A.03
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Scott, Jake
P1.15
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Selwood, Mary
P2.24
Poster session 2
Thursday
Selwood, Mary
P3.07
Poster session 3
Friday
Shakir, Saad
P1.19
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Shakir, Saad
P3.18
Poster session 3
Friday
Sheppard, James
2B.1
Hypertension
Thursday
Shinkins, Bethany
1A.4
Cancer
Wednesday
Sills, Richard
P1.20
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Sills, Richard
P3.31
Poster session 3
Friday
Silverwood, Victoria
P3.12
Poster session 3
Friday
PRESENTER INDEX Sinnott, Carol
EP2B.02
Prescribing
Thursday
Sinnott, Carol
P2.32
Poster session 2
Thursday
Sinnott, Carol
P2.33
Poster session 2
Thursday
Sirdifield, Coral
P1.08
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Smith, Chris
4D.1
Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s health
Friday
Smith, Emily
EP3C.04
Weight management
Friday
Sohanpal, Ratna
P2.18
Poster session 2
Thursday
Springate, David
4A.2
Metabolic disease
Friday
Springate, David
P2.19
Poster session 2
Thursday
Stanford, Rosie
EP1A.4
Musculoskeletal
Wednesday
Steed, Liz
EP3C.07
Weight management
Friday
Steer, Colin
EP3A.05
Vulnerable groups
Friday
Stevens, Richard
2B.2
Hypertension
Thursday
Stevens, Sarah
2B.4
Hypertension
Thursday
Stokes, Jonathan
3B.1
Health services
Thursday
Stokes, Jonathan
P3.34
Poster session 3
Friday
Sugavanam, Thava Priya
P1.37
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Sullivan, Frank
EP3D.07
Diagnosis and cancer
Friday
Sullivan, Frank
Plenary1.1 Opening session
Sullivan, Frank
P3.05
Poster session 3
Friday
Sumathipala, Kethakie
P2.08
Poster session 2
Thursday
Sweeney, Lorna
3A.1
Infectious diseases
Thursday
Swinglehurst, Deborah
EP1B.6
Consultation & communication
Wednesday
Tammes, Peter
P1.28
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Tan, Valerie
P2.28
Poster session 2
Thursday
Tapsfield, Julia
P1.29
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Taylor, Anna
P1.10
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Taylor, Clare J
3C.6
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Terry, Rohini
EP1F.3
Miscellaneous
Wednesday
Togher, Fiona
P3.26
Poster session 3
Friday
Tomlinson, Jonathon
P1.12
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Tonkin-Crine, Sarah
EP2B.10
Prescribing
Thursday
Tranter, Jennifer
P3.27
Poster session 3
Friday
Turnbull, Sophie
2D.3
Respiratory tract infection
Thursday
Tyrrell, Edward
1D.5
Prescribing
Wednesday
Tzortziou Brown, Victoria
P1.16
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Uijen, Maike
P2.30
Poster session 2
Thursday
Usher-Smith, Juliet
3C.2
Cardiovascular disease
Thursday
Usher-Smith, Juliet
P2.03
Poster session 2
Thursday
Usher-Smith, Juliet
P3.42
Poster session 3
Friday
Valderas, Jose
EP2C.04
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Van den Bruel, Ann
1B.6
Child health
Wednesday
Wednesday
37
PRESENTER INDEX
38
van Ginneken, Nadja
P3.10
Poster session 3
Friday
Vaughan, Robert
P1.06
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Vellinga, Akke
EP1E.3
Infection
Wednesday
Verbakel, Jan
3A.3
Infectious diseases
Thursday
Verbakel, Jan
4A.4
Metabolic disease
Friday
Verma, Puja
1C.6
Delivery of General Practice
Wednesday
Vinogradova, Yana
P1.21
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Vivekanantham, Arani
P3.30
Poster session 3
Friday
Vos, Jolien
4C.2
Elderly care/dementia
Friday
Vos, Jolien
P3.11
Poster session 3
Friday
Walabyeki, Julie
EP3C.09
Weight management
Friday
Walabyeki, Julie
P2.38
Poster session 2
Thursday
Walabyeki, Julie
P3.33
Poster session 3
Friday
Waldecker, Andrea
P1.40
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Walker, Sarah
P2.02
Poster session 2
Thursday
Wallace, Paul
EP3B.03
Methodology
Friday
Walton, Liz
P1.05
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Wathall, Simon
P3.04
Poster session 3
Friday
Weatherburn, Christopher
EP3D.03
Diagnosis and cancer
Friday
Wersocki, Emily
P1.32
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Weston, Charlotte
P2.13
Poster session 2
Thursday
White, Patrick
EP2D.03
Respiratory
Thursday
Wiles, Nicola
2C.4
Mental health
Thursday
Willcox, Merlin
1B.3
Child health
Wednesday
Williams, Nefyn
EP2C.02
Older adults/Elderly and Mental health
Thursday
Williams, Thomas
EP3B.04
Methodology
Friday
Williams, Veronika
4B.2
Respiratory
Friday
Williamson, Christopher
P1.17
Poster session 1
Wednesday
Wood, Fiona
3D.2
Musculoskeletal
Thursday
Wood, Fiona
3D.3
Musculoskeletal
Thursday
Woodhead, Charlotte
P3.35
Poster session 3
Friday
Wye, Lesley
1C.5
Delivery of General Practice
Wednesday
Wye, Lesley
EP3B.07
Methodology
Friday
Yang, Yaling
EP3D.05
Diagnosis and cancer
Friday
Yardley, Lucy
4D.4
Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s health
Friday
Yon, Katherine
EP1D.3
Education
Wednesday
Yu, Dahai
EP1A.3
Musculoskeletal
Wednesday
Zhang, Xinyu
P1.46
Poster session 1
Wednesday
NOTES
NOTES
NOTES
Save the dates in your diary for the
45th Annual Conference of the Society for Academic Primary Care
6th-8th JULY 2016 Dublin Castle, Dame Street, Dublin 2
DEPARTMENT OF GENERAL PRACTICE AND FAMILY MEDICINE HRB CENTRE FOR PRIMARY CARE RESEARCH
www.sapc.ac.uk
Oxford University Museum of Natural History Drinks reception (Wednesday)
St Anneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s College Accommodation
Keble College Conference dinner (Thursday) and accommodation
Andrew Wiles Building Mathematical Institute Conference Venue
annual conference 2015 venues
Andrew Wiles Building Mathematical Institute
L3
L2 L1
Café
C1 C2 C3 L6
Lower Ground Floor C5 - Speaker preview C6 - Organisers’ office
L4
L5
C4 C5 C6